I don't think Teams is quite in this same space. Teams is 99%* business usage, whereas Discord is much more for the gaming crowd, personal usage, and has a much lower age demographic.I'm sure that, since MS Teams is already a big player in the same general space and an acquisition of DIscord would reduce competition, this will receive a rigorous anti-trust analysis before...ha-ha-HA!
Damn it - couldn't quite complete the sentence with a straight face!
*My made up statistic.
LinkedIn was always a nightmare, so there wasn't much they could do to make it worse.This is such a huge unknown if Microsoft acquires Discord.
When Microsoft acquired Skype, they took a working communication tool and slowly ruined it. Increasingly annoying updates, stupid UI remakes, message delivery problems with out-of-order, delayed, and once resending months old messages. Skype even had a brief period of using Skype Mobile notifications to promote Skype Qik which was a separate app solely designed to send "quick" videos (remember that mistake?). No one I know still uses Skype anymore, everyone moved to Discord. The fact that Microsoft killed MSN Messenger for Skype, then ruined Skype does not instill confidence.
But then Microsoft seems to have done a good job with acquiring GitLab. So maybe there is hope? I know I would abandon ship if Google got anywhere near Discord.
When Microsoft acquired Skype, it was under the Ballmer regime. Look at the acquisitions since Nadella took over. Github, LinkedIN, Minecraft.....they are all very much in place and have definitely not been butchered like most things Ballmer touched, especially in his later years as CEO...
This is inaccurate. Like any big corporation, Microsoft's goal for acquisitions is not "to make money." It's to boost its share value - which is how the executives who make these decisions get the biggest part of their compensation.Everyone freaking out about MS trying to charge for the service are missing the point. Discord has to make money. If "Discord Prime" is not enough, they will have find other ways of monetizing.
I imagine Discord would also be appealing for Amazon to pair with Twitch, but I'm not familiar with Amazon's history of successfully (or not successfully) integrating acquisitions into existing products.
For the life of me, I never understood the value proposition of Mixer. I don’t really “get” Twitch, but I at least understand it’s existence. But if the product is just “here’s a portal to watch self-produced randos play video games in real time,” I don’t see why there needs to be more than one portal."This seems like a good thing for Discord."
"Mixer? What the hell is Mixer?"
Mixer was doomed from the start without some grassroots push to foster talent.
Discord on the other hand does strike me as a reasonably unique package of services that have been smartly organized in a way that isn’t satisfied by anything else.
Except now instead of covering our monthly costs and earning a reasonable profit it's we have to make the masters back their $10B investment which is obviously a significant multiple of the first figure.Everyone freaking out about MS trying to charge for the service are missing the point. Discord has to make money. If "Discord Prime" is not enough, they will have find other ways of monetizing. If anything, MS is going to give them more runway to find a business model that works and doesn't push the users away
A lot of people are saying Microsoft ruined Skype. Skype was never good.
I'm not sure what hole Microsoft is looking to plug in their portfolio by acquiring Discord. However, the have made some other acquisitions lately, Git and LinkedIn, that has gone well, no massive upheaval. I'm ok with it.
Discord is used by a lot of gamers, why couldn't Valve pick it up and add support to Steam? Having Discord support in the Steam SDK (if it's not there already, I have never worked on the Steam SDK) would be an easy way for multiplayer games to get chat and voice services.
Regardless of who purchases Discord, does that mean there will be more moderation of content? I know there have been some "controversial" (read: racist, sexist, fascist, etc.) Discord servers in the past, I don't know what the current status of those group is however.
Huh, I had no idea. I’m sorta surprised that feature didn’t generate more switching back in the Beam era. I guess if you’re a really big time streamer you’re so deluged by communication that the latency is irrelevant.For the life of me, I never understood the value proposition of Mixer. I don’t really “get” Twitch, but I at least understand it’s existence. But if the product is just “here’s a portal to watch self-produced randos play video games in real time,” I don’t see why there needs to be more than one portal."This seems like a good thing for Discord."
"Mixer? What the hell is Mixer?"
Mixer was doomed from the start without some grassroots push to foster talent.
Discord on the other hand does strike me as a reasonably unique package of services that have been smartly organized in a way that isn’t satisfied by anything else.
At the time, Beam's "Faster than Light" low latency was miles better than Twitch. It enabled the kind of interactivity that twitch streamers are only just now getting onboard with.
Well, well, well....
Look who's interested in taking over the gaming industry. Seems like someone at Microsoft finally got a good whiff of all that money in gaming.
I wonder if Gabe is interested in selling Valve/Steam.
I for one would totally support this, just to see Tim Sweeney's face.
Everyone freaking out about MS trying to charge for the service are missing the point. Discord has to make money. If "Discord Prime" is not enough, they will have find other ways of monetizing. If anything, MS is going to give them more runway to find a business model that works and doesn't push the users away
Ma Bell was broken up in 1982. Now...Microsoft wouldn't be the worst steward in the world, but boy am I sick of 4 companies owning, ya know, everything.
That’s what happens when antitrust in the good ol’ US of A hasn’t worked in some time.
Decades, depending on who you happen to believe.
"The breakup of the Bell System resulted in the creation of seven independent companies that were formed from the original twenty-two AT&T-controlled members of the System.[5]
On January 1, 1984, these companies were NYNEX, Pacific Telesis, Ameritech, Bell Atlantic, Southwestern Bell Corporation, BellSouth, and US West.
NYNEX, acquired by Bell Atlantic in 1996, now part of Verizon Communications
Pacific Telesis, acquired by SBC in 1997, now part of AT&T Inc.
Ameritech, acquired by SBC in 1999, now part of AT&T Inc.
Bell Atlantic, merged with GTE in 2000 to form Verizon Communications
Southwestern Bell Corporation, rebranded as SBC Communications in 1995, acquired AT&T Corporation in 2005
BellSouth, acquired by AT&T Inc. in 2006
US West, acquired by Qwest in 2000, which in turn was acquired by CenturyLink in 2011"
Yeeeeeaaaah...
Nah, Steam's working on ProtonDB, ready to take over the home gaming PC market from Microsoft when they finally decide to charge subscriptions for Windows.Well, well, well....
Look who's interested in taking over the gaming industry. Seems like someone at Microsoft finally got a good whiff of all that money in gaming.
I wonder if Gabe is interested in selling Valve/Steam.
I for one would totally support this, just to see Tim Sweeney's face.
Eventually, Steam gets absorbed by Epic, Amazon or Microsoft. Gabe's doing exactly zero innovation on the platform and essentially riding it out, extracting profits. Ever since the failed big screen TV UI push, there's been next to no innovations in the UI, HUD, friends interactions, nothing. My Steam client looks and operates the exact same way it did in 2017.
At this point, I'm convinced Gabe doesn't have it in him to compete in the changing landscape that is PC gaming. If not for the massive install base acquired as an early entrant into the PC market, they would be gone.
It always surprises me that Microsoft who have a Market Value of $1.5 Trillion and had revenues of $143 Billion in 2019 - which puts them on the same level as Google but behind Apple and Amazon and ahead of Facebook - have somehow avoided being labelled as 'Big Tech' and have seemed to avoid the merger/anti-trust issues of their rivals.
Ma Bell was broken up in 1982. Now...Microsoft wouldn't be the worst steward in the world, but boy am I sick of 4 companies owning, ya know, everything.
That’s what happens when antitrust in the good ol’ US of A hasn’t worked in some time.
Decades, depending on who you happen to believe.
"The breakup of the Bell System resulted in the creation of seven independent companies that were formed from the original twenty-two AT&T-controlled members of the System.[5]
On January 1, 1984, these companies were NYNEX, Pacific Telesis, Ameritech, Bell Atlantic, Southwestern Bell Corporation, BellSouth, and US West.
NYNEX, acquired by Bell Atlantic in 1996, now part of Verizon Communications
Pacific Telesis, acquired by SBC in 1997, now part of AT&T Inc.
Ameritech, acquired by SBC in 1999, now part of AT&T Inc.
Bell Atlantic, merged with GTE in 2000 to form Verizon Communications
Southwestern Bell Corporation, rebranded as SBC Communications in 1995, acquired AT&T Corporation in 2005
BellSouth, acquired by AT&T Inc. in 2006
US West, acquired by Qwest in 2000, which in turn was acquired by CenturyLink in 2011"
Yeeeeeaaaah...
The word “baking” implies that Google has an attention span long enough to allow the dough to finish rising and be placed in the oven. Not sure I’d agree with that assessment.Google should have bought this and baked it into Android. It would have helped both their gaming and social networking services. Mind you, they would have probably ruined it.
I don't really have high hopes for MS either, considering their Xbox apps for Android, plus their apps in general for Xbox One, have been broken/buggy P'sOS...
Watching Microsoft apply its business strategy to its XBox arena means I can easily see the company integrating Discord into Teams, or at least modify Discord to use its Teams foundation.I don't think Teams is quite in this same space. Teams is 99%* business usage, whereas Discord is much more for the gaming crowd, personal usage, and has a much lower age demographic.
*My made up statistic.
Nah, Steam's working on ProtonDB, ready to take over the home gaming PC market from Microsoft when they finally decide to charge subscriptions for Windows.Well, well, well....
Look who's interested in taking over the gaming industry. Seems like someone at Microsoft finally got a good whiff of all that money in gaming.
I wonder if Gabe is interested in selling Valve/Steam.
I for one would totally support this, just to see Tim Sweeney's face.
Eventually, Steam gets absorbed by Epic, Amazon or Microsoft. Gabe's doing exactly zero innovation on the platform and essentially riding it out, extracting profits. Ever since the failed big screen TV UI push, there's been next to no innovations in the UI, HUD, friends interactions, nothing. My Steam client looks and operates the exact same way it did in 2017.
At this point, I'm convinced Gabe doesn't have it in him to compete in the changing landscape that is PC gaming. If not for the massive install base acquired as an early entrant into the PC market, they would be gone.
The concern is really with Microsoft trying to rope people into their accounts. That'd be the end of Discord. Discord's killer app is that you can always use the identity you want to. If Microsoft doesn't understand that, they'll destroy it and everyone will shift off to another service.[I work @ Microsoft, am totally uninvolved in all of this, all comments are my own and personal speculation]
My takes on this in no particular order:
1) Microsoft effectively has no consumer chat offerings, and this would fill a big gap/niche. Teams for consumers is overkill and I believe (based on personal anecdotes) that it's not very popular. Skype is dead in all but name (sorry folks, but c'mon), and so this could be really valuable. It's a well-built and well-loved service with inroads in the gaming, artistic/creative, etc spaces.
1b) I don't think the near-term future of this acquisition would change that trajectory, as I think heavy Microsoft account integration and so on would be relatively slow to materialize and (hopefully) done more deliberately and carefully.
2) While it's easy to look at the botched Skype acquisition and see dire portents I think it's more instructive to look at Microsoft's mega-acquisitions under new leadership ('The Nadella Effect,' if you like). I believe the substantially more hands-off approach taken with LinkedIn, GitHub, etc would likely be repeated with a Discord acquisition. This, in my reading, means that an acquisition might increase tie-ins with Microsoft services (hello Xbox) but it would not simultaneously come with handicapping of non-Microsoft integrations. That particular hegemony strategy isn't currently in favor at the company so I wouldn't expect to see it repeated. The consensus seems to be that both LinkedIn+GitHub acquisitions are going well, so why change what has worked in the past?
3) I'm a Discord Nitro subscriber basically because I get $100/yr of value from Discord. That said, I would imagine that subscription fee could be sort of consumed through other offerings (GamePass + xCloud is a natural fit here in the electronic gaming space).
If you, like me, value the ad-free nature of Discord then a purchase of Discord, and particularly a purchase by a non-advertising company, should be seen as really good news. A different purchaser (Amazon, Google, Facebook, etc) with stronger capability in the consumer ad space would see things very differently here.
4) This is not the same as Google's struggles with chat offerings either as the long lineage of Microsoft's eventual failures in this space are both less numerous and spread over a span of time that is basically double Google's. I also think Google's struggles are substantially more self-inflicted (like killing products people actively enjoy in favor of some new unproven system, vs. slowly letting the products rot) but Microsoft's struggles in the consumer chat/comms space are farcical for other reasons.![]()
Microsoft bought Github and yet they've been very hands-off so far.The concern is really with Microsoft trying to rope people into their accounts. That'd be the end of Discord. Discord's killer app is that you can always use the identity you want to. If Microsoft doesn't understand that, they'll destroy it and everyone will shift off to another service.
The way Mattermost is organised, with chans, semi-permanent voice/ video chat (with a Jitsi server on the side), makes its absence in the above linked list a bit surprising. It would just take proper packaging with a video chat service to make Mattermost a definitive Discord alternative.With any luck, the FTC will deny it. Having an anti-merger advocate in charge of the FTC may help.
But it rather pisses me off that Microsoft (and three other companies) gaze upon every other successful independent service with hungry eyes. Microsoft couldn't leverage their own home-built gaming voice/video service against the competition, so fucking buy up the competition and all the users.
Someone needs to tell them "no". Other than TeamSpeak, there are no other independent services like Discord (that I know of) that have all of the features and ease of use that aren't owned by one of the big five companies or as embedded features of other programs. But I don't know if the list of alternatives to Discord I looked at is comprehensive, so there could be a nice, hidden gem out there that no one's heard of yet that might see a sudden and huge increase in users in the near future if this goes through.
GitHub and LinkedIn are professional services. Discord is a consumer service.Microsoft bought Github and yet they've been very hands-off so far.The concern is really with Microsoft trying to rope people into their accounts. That'd be the end of Discord. Discord's killer app is that you can always use the identity you want to. If Microsoft doesn't understand that, they'll destroy it and everyone will shift off to another service.
I’ve never met a single person who speaks fondly of Teamspeak. I share the concern that fee-for-service platforms have a hard time gaining traction, but Discord won because it was the better product (and it wasn’t even close.) Nobody is going back.most people I game with was using Mumble or Teamspeak, before Discord came on the scene. Everyone knew that Discord was burning through cash, but it was better than Mumble, because you didn't have to pay a small fee for server hosting. But, gamers will go back to that in a heartbeat if Microsoft buys Discord
So, what's the migration path when MS screws it all up and then decides to discontinue the service, IF the deal goes through?
Or, when MS decides you can only use it on Xbox or for an Xbox game ..., THEN discontinuing the service, if the deal goes through??
MSN Messenger, Communicator, Lync, Skype, Teams, and now Discord.
Microsoft is really trying to beat Google at number messaging services churned through.
$71.43 each?140 million monthly users, 10 billion dollars.
In case any Discord users were wondering how much they were worth.
Skype was pretty much left as is to their own devices. (It is standalone company owned by Microsoft, same like GitHub)I have repeatedly said discord is better than teams in literally every single way but did not mean that as an invitation for MS to buy it.
I mean buy it and kill teams sure but I suspect it'll just be "skyped"
It's one thing to have a negative opinion of Microsoft, but the view that these days they're less competent and more amoral than they were in the past is really wild given their recent history.I'd be glad to fork over the $71 myself, to avoid being owned (in yet another way) by the incompetent, amoral corporate nightmare that Microsoft has become.How does Discord makes $71 of value from each user? How many users are paying for Discord?140 million monthly users, 10 billion dollars.
In case any Discord users were wondering how much they were worth.
It's me, the guy who likes TeamSpeak!I’ve never met a single person who speaks fondly of Teamspeak. I share the concern that fee-for-service platforms have a hard time gaining traction, but Discord won because it was the better product (and it wasn’t even close.) Nobody is going back.most people I game with was using Mumble or Teamspeak, before Discord came on the scene. Everyone knew that Discord was burning through cash, but it was better than Mumble, because you didn't have to pay a small fee for server hosting. But, gamers will go back to that in a heartbeat if Microsoft buys Discord