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Like it or not, Mark Zuckerberg is now Silicon Valley's ambassador to the rest of the world
Mark Zuckerberg and Donald Trump
Mark Zuckerberg and Donald Trump

(Business Insider)
Mark Zuckerberg, Donald Trump

For the most part, Facebook's big show this week was a snoozer.

The company's main product announcement, its attempt to turn Messenger into a hub little programs for businesses to chat with customers, was greeted by puzzlement from users and skepticism from the developers who were the main audience for the show.

Some of the demos, like a virtual reality selfie stick, drew oohs and ahhs, but they aren't actually things that you can buy today.

But there was one big exception: Mark Zuckerberg's keynote speech.

With that speech, Zuckerberg took his place as Silicon Valley's ambassador to the rest of the world. Like him or hate him, there's nobody else as qualified for the job. And he just took it.

Beyond cheerleading

Speeches like this are usually cheerleading sessions for a company and its products, interspersed with moments of weird entertainment, like the time in 2012 when Google cofounder Sergey Brin interrupted a speech with a live video of skydivers wearing Google Glass.

Even the master of the form, Steve Jobs, stuck mostly to Apple's new products and how great they were, with occasional diversions into Apple's broader philosophy, like the time in 2011 when he said Apple was at the intersection of technology and liberal arts.

fb 10 year
fb 10 year

(Facebook)
Facebook's 10 year plan

Zuckerberg started out in a completely different way, by sketching out his vision of where Facebook and technology as a whole were going to go over the next decade.

As part of this, he reiterated Facebook's mission:

We stand for connecting every person. For a global community. For bringing people together. For giving all people a voice. For a free flow of ideas and culture across nations. And this idea of connecting the world has gotten stronger over the last century. You can now travel almost anywhere in the world in less than a day. Countries trade more openly and cooperate more easily than ever. And the Internet has enabled all of us to access and share more ideas and information than ever before. We've gone from a world of isolated communities to one global community, and we're all better off for it.

Zuckerberg then expressed concern at forces pushing the opposite direction. A lot of Americans thought he was referring specifically to Donald Trump, but these forces are present in a lot of countries.

I hear fearful voices calling for building walls and distancing people they label as others. For blocking free expression, for slowing immigration, reducing trade, and in some cases around the world even cutting access to the Internet.