"Do you want to hear one more? This one's a real knee-slapper." |
This brief blog post is not about the pros and cons of TikTok, nor is it aboutthe pros and cons of our government shutting it down. Rather, it is about a lesson I learned the hard way on Facebook a couple years ago.
At some point in time I was monetizing my blog with Google ads, and even though the revenue stream was mainly a trickle, there were monthly deposits made to my credit union account. It was daily habit to write, publish, then share on other social media, primarily Twitter and Facebook. Because I wrote frequently about the local arts scene, a large percentage of my readers came through the Facebook platform.
Suddenly, without explanation, I was unable to share my blog on Facebook. And since the Zuckerberg-founded enterprise also owns Instagram, my blog was also restricted there as well.
The lesson is this: if you do not own the digital real estate where you have established your business, you're vulnerable to having everything you've built get dismantled.
This experience prompted me to see who are currently the biggest financial beneficiaries on TikTok. So I asked Google, which replied:
According to explodingtopics.com, the highest-paid TikTok influencers in 2024 are:
- Charli D'Amelio: Estimated earnings of $17.5 million
- Dixie D'Amelio: Estimated earnings of $10 million
- Addison Rae: Estimated earnings of $8.5 million
- Khaby Lame: Estimated earnings of $5 million
- Bella Poarch: Estimated earnings of $5 million
- Josh Richards: Estimated earnings of $5 million
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