*By Conor White*
After losing $136 billion in market cap in less than a week, Facebook is looking for ways to reinvigorate its outlook at a time of slowing ad revenue growth, [continued fallout](https://cheddar.com/videos/facebook-stock-crushed-after-disappointing-earnings) from the Cambridge Analytical data privacy scandal, and the [latest revelation](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/31/us/politics/facebook-political-campaign-midterms.html) Tuesday that it's detected attempts to influence this November's midterm elections.
"It's been a long 2018 for Facebook," said Madison Malone Kircher, an associate editor at New York Magazine. "Which brings us to the one thing Facebook is doing right, and that's the Stories platform. It works really well on Instagram, which Facebook owns, and they've really been trying to push to make it work on Facebook."
Instagram Stories has 400 million daily users, double the number of users of rival Snapchat, and Facebook has been trying to lure advertisers to the Stories platform.
Kircher said in an interview Tuesday with Cheddar that neither of the social media companies has figured out how to make user-generated stories on their platforms profitable.
"Snapchat, which is the creator of this style of posting, has also struggled with it," Kircher said. "They rolled out a new platform called 'Commercials' this week, which is similarly trying to figure out how to sell ads against this style of content."
In the end, Kircher said Facebook can push Stories to advertisers all it wants, but it won't be successful until it's popular with users.
"It's a two-fold problem Facebook has," Kircher said. "One, trying to convince advertisers to buy ads in this space, but first they have to figure out how to get us to use it."
For more on this story, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/facebook-pushing-stories-feature-to-advertisers).
The e-commerce giant announced Tuesday it would raise the minimum wage for all employees to $15 an hour and lobby for an increase in the federal wage, which has stood at $7.25 since 2009.
Tune in at 10:50 am ET, when we speak to David Clark, Amazon's SVP of Worldwide Operations, about the news.
Olivier Rabiller, president and CEO of Honeywell spinoff Garrett Motion, told Cheddar on Monday that the company's strategy will not be to change too much. Rabiller also said that as the company heads into the electric vehicle space, he sees Tesla as a potential customer, not a competitor.
After the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando in 2016, Sarah Ullman felt called to action. The Los Angeles-based filmmaker is the founder of "One Vote at a Time," a Super PAC created to stop gun violence. She spends her days making free campaign ads for politicians who support gun control policies and are running in competitive districts.
Tesla reportedly made a record 80,000 vehicles in the third quarter, marking a welcome change of subject for a company and CEO buffeted by scandal. Sean O'Kane, reporter for The Verge, and John Reed Stark, an SEC attorney, discussed the future of the company and how the settlement with regulators will affect Musk personally.
These are the headlines you Need 2 Know.
With Facebook racing to contain the damage from its latest -- and largest ever -- security breach, Michael Nuñez, the deputy tech editor for Mashable, said that users are starting to get smarter about what kind of data they share with the company.
Verizon launched its first 5G network in four U.S. cities Monday. One possible use for the technology will be in rolling out self-driving vehicles. Hans Vestberg, CEO of Verizon Communications, said that while it will take some time for fully-autonomous cars to be deployed, 5G will help in solving connectivity and latency issues.
Hans Vestberg, CEO of Verizon Communications, said that the newest 5G network that Verizon is launching in four new cities, is the answer for cord-cutters. The network is the fastest on the market, and Vestberg said it's "a new way to get TV into your home."
Wells Fargo has officially launched a new digital organizer "Control Tower" within its mobile banking app, so customers nationwide can track their increasingly complex and scattered financial footprints. Ben Soccorsy, head of digital payments for Wells Fargo Virtual Channels, told Cheddar, "Customers want the ability to control their data and share it when and how they want."
Tesla looked to claw back its losses Monday after Elon Musk settled a lawsuit with the SEC, agreeing to pay a $20 million fine and step down as chairman for at least three years.
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