Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Legacy Archives

There may be no Facebook Phone, but there is a Facebook Card

Add as a preferred source on Google
facebook card balance
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Facebook is getting into gift cards. In the wake of the company’s quarterly earnings statement, which concluded that Facebook Gifts was a minor and rather insignificant part of Facebook’s revenue generating business in 2012, Facebook has immediately followed up ironically with the announcement of the Facebook Card. Users can now purchase Facebook gift cards through the social network.

facebook card
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Off the bat, the gift card program supports brands including Jamba Juice, Olive Garden, Sephora, and Target, all on the same card. Facebook offers gift cards already from select retailers like Starbucks, but what makes this gift card unique is that a single card can hold multiple balances from each type of retailer. So $100 for Target, $15 for Jamba Juice, and $20 for Olive Garden is a reasonable combination of credit that someone might have on their card, for example.

facebook card selection
Image used with permission by copyright holder

To purchase the Facebook Card for a friend or family member, simply select it from the Gift Cards & Digital category. You can add a preset value of credit that you’d like to add to the card. After the purchase is completed, your friend will receive the Facebook Card in the mail. In a blog post announcing the card, Facebook makes sure to note that the cards are reusable for making purchases among these select retailers.

Recommended Videos

Just how “insignificant” is Facebook Gifts (and Promoted Posts)? This category only generated $5 million in four months for the social network, which raked in a total of $1.13 billion in revenue. The social network launched Facebook Gifts as an e-commerce opportunity for the social network to branch off and attempt to generate revenue in an alternative monetization strategy that parallels its advertising business. The launch announcement happened back in September 2012, but the program rolled out to select users at first and globally over time, so Gifts is still in its infancy.

But despite the pocket change that Gift brings in for Facebook, it’s not hard to see that Facebook’s launch of its cards is a strategic move. The social network hopes to eventually crowd out its competitors by taking a jab at Facebook connected digital gifting apps like Gyft and Wrapp. Note that these third-party apps use your Facebook data to figure out your friends or family’s birthdays, and Facebook by default recommends users to purchase gifts on birthdays – clearly, this is direct competition to Facebook’s native gifting service.

Wrapp and Gyft have a large head start on Facebook with hundreds of retailer partnerships, while Facebook Card only has four partners for now, but we’re expecting Facebook to announce additional retail partners (and quickly) in the months to come.

Users are able to check their Facebook Card balances from their phone or desktop, and availability will roll out “gradually” to folks in the U.S.

Francis Bea
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Francis got his first taste of the tech industry in a failed attempt at a startup during his time as a student at the…
Topics
After YouTube, TikTok is testing its own AI likeness detection tool
TikTok's new tool lets creators flag AI deepfakes of themselves directly.
Home page of TikTok on Web.

AI deepfakes have become a headache for creators, and TikTok is finally stepping up to fight back. Social media consultant Matt Navarra spotted the platform quietly testing a new opt-in tool that hunts down AI-generated content mimicking a creator's face, giving them the power to flag it directly.

https://twitter.com/MattNavarra/status/2078129989128450064

Read more
You can now generate songs in your iMessage chats
iMessage users can now turn chats into short AI-generated songs
Text, Business Card, Paper

Suno has added an iMessage extension to its iOS app, letting users generate 30-second songs from voice recordings or typed prompts inside a Messages conversation.

The feature is available in the latest version of the Suno app and requires both people in the chat to have it installed. Users can access Suno from the plus menu in Messages, create a track, and share it without opening the standalone app.

Read more
The UK just proposed a midnight social media curfew for teens that they can bypass in seconds
The government wants 16- and 17-year-olds off apps like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube from midnight to 6 AM, but the restriction has a built-in workaround.
Girl using a black phone while lying down

The UK just proposed a midnight social media curfew for teenagers, but it comes with a built-in escape hatch. According to the BBC, the UK government plans to restrict social media access for 16- and 17-year-olds between midnight and 6 AM, preventing them from using apps like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. But getting around it will take nothing more than a few taps.

A curfew teens can switch off

Read more