Category: Social Media

  • Instagram Hit With Lawsuit Over Terms Of Service Change

    Instagram Hit With Lawsuit Over Terms Of Service Change

    Instagram

     A class action lawsuit against Instagram has been filed in San Francisco federal court, following user outrage regarding the mobile photo sharing app’s changed Terms of Service.

    This appears to be the first civil lawsuit filed as a result of Instagram service term changes, Reuters reports.

    The new Terms of Service agreement included clauses that referred to the company’s new powers to sell users’ photos without warning or compensation, reported RT. New clauses also said that users waived their rights to participate in class-action lawsuits against the company.

    A strong backlash, including a blizzard of news coverage, made Instagram relent and issue a statement of apology. The company agreed to reword the terms and delete some of the more controversial language.

    Instagram did, however, retain the clause forbidding arbitration as well as ads with user content.

    The lawsuit was filed by the San Diego-based law firm Finkelstein & Krinsk on behalf of Instagram user Lucy Funes and others. The plaintiffs in the suit claim that Instagram breached their contract with users as the only way to get out of the terms is to deactivate the service altogether.

    This controversial issue has also caused many users to switch to other services which are similar to Instagram such as Yahoo!’s Flickr which released the new mobile app for iOS with build in vintage filters to rival with Instagram prior to the changes of terms and conditions by Instagram. Flickr also started offering it’s user three months of free Flickr Pro service to take advantage of this situation.

  • Instagram Photos No Longer Appearing On Twitter Feeds

    Instagram Photos No Longer Appearing On Twitter Feeds

    twitter

    If you’re wondering what happened to those Instagram photos you were trying to share on Twitter, you’re not alone.

    Photo images from the popular photo sharing service went dark Sunday on Twitter, a decision, Twitter says, that was made by Instagram, which was acquired earlier in the year for $1 billion by Facebook.

    [quote]”Instagram has disabled photo integration with Twitter,” the micro-blogging site wrote in a status update. “As a result, photos are no longer appearing in Tweets or user photo galleries.”[/quote]

    Before you go throwing your smartphone into the wall, however, that’s not to say that Twitter has banished Instagram entirely from its service. That’s not what we mean. You can still take a photograph on Instagram, automatically upload it to your linked Twitter account, and your message will appear on the website with the standard “instagr.am” link to your pic following it.

    What appears to be different now, for unknown reasons, is that the photos themselves aren’t showing up in feeds. In other words, there’s no cropped image to accompany the post – just the raw text and the Instagram link.

    What remains to be seen is whether the issue at-hand is a purposeful act by Twitter or Instagram, or whether some kind of glitch is affecting Instagram shots on Twitter.

  • Facebook To Buy Whatsapp?

    Facebook To Buy Whatsapp?

    whatsapp

    TechCrunch is reporting that Facebook is looking to acquire WhatsApp, according to sources close to the matter.

    Whatsapp, the multiplatform mobile messaging app has been one of the runaway success stories for ad-free, paid services.

    Founded in 2009, the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company provides a smartphone app for Android, BlackBerry, iOS, Symbian, and Windows Phone that delivers text messages as well as images and audio and video messages. The ad-free Whatsapp reportedly has about 100 million daily users, with a presence in 250 countries on a variety of platforms.

    Whastapp announced in October 2011 that it was serving up 1 billion messages per day: “Just how much is 1 billion messages? That is 41,666,667 messages an hour, 694,444 messages a minute, and 11,574 messages a second,” the company wrote in a blog post at the time. The company added that it was a “small step closer towards our goal: providing a great mobile messaging system for a global market, regardless of your handset.”

    Developing…

    [Tech Crunch]

  • Facebook Rolls Out ‘Photo Sync’; Automatically Upload 2GB of Photos

    Facebook Rolls Out ‘Photo Sync’; Automatically Upload 2GB of Photos

    facebook

    After expanding the test to iOS users last week, Facebook has officially launched Photo Sync for both Android and iOS devices. Photo Sync allows users to enable automatic uploading of any photos they take with their mobile device straight to Facebook. No manual uploading, no hassle. Just seamless photo uploading.

    Unlike Google+, the app will not proceed with the uploads unless you explicitly open the app, and you can choose whether to do so on 3G/LTE or only over WiFi.

    [quote]“Today we’re excited to roll out photo sync, which makes it easier to share photos. With this feature, photos from your phone sync automatically to a private album on the web. When you want to share these photos, just pick and post your favorites,” says Facebook. “We began testing photo sync in August and will continue to make it available to more people.”[/quote]

    The feature, titled Photo Sync, uploads photos to a private folder, but can easily be made shared to your timeline with a couple taps.

    Photo Sync appears to have been included in the mobile apps already; Facebook merely flipped a switch in the backend to turn it on. While there are many services vying for the same space — Google+ and Dropbox are notable examples — Facebook clearly has the market share lead to make this feature stick.

    The feature is rolling out in the coming days, so if you don’t see it in your Facebook app settings, try again in a little bit.

  • Finally! Facebook Rolling Out Share Button For Mobile Site

    Finally! Facebook Rolling Out Share Button For Mobile Site

    facebook

    Facebook has turned on one of its most requested features, and it will make link hounds on the social network very happy.

    A “Share” button has finally been added to mobile — first the mobile web, then Android and iOS apps — allowing users to take an existing post and duplicate it on their timelines with a comment or snarky remark.

    While it’s possible that this will add a lot of unwanted content to users’ feeds, it may begin to replace the “Like” button as people choose to quickly action a post instead of liking it, which appears more passive.

    Facebook has been iterating its feature set to compete with fast-moving Twitter, and a mobile “share” button is more akin to a retweet than a like, which endorses but does not move a post past its original location. Zuckerberg and Co. have likely been testing out the feature for some time, and are going to be cognizant of how it affect users’ experiences. It already consolidates posts that have been shared by multiple people, and companies are going to be very happy about this addition.

    There’s no word when the feature is coming to the Android and iOS apps, but we’d expect it to roll out in the coming days.

  • Facebook For iOS Updated To Version 5.1 With New Features

    Facebook For iOS Updated To Version 5.1 With New Features

    facebook

    Facebook for iOS got a nice bump yesterday when it was updated to version to 5.1. Unlike its Android counterpart, which seems to be trapped in development purgatory, the iOS version of Facebook is being regularly updated with new features and improved performance.

    The new version of Facebook’s iOS app has the yet-to-be launched Gifts feature built-in, so users will be able to send their friends presents through the social network while on the go. 

    Messenger is now more streamlined. The Facebook for iOS app now gives users the ability to swipe left anywhere in the app to quickly see who’s available online and send a message. Friends can also be added to the favourite bar for quicker and easier access.

    Some other new features found in Facebook’s iOS 5.1: Users can form a favorites list of friends they contact frequently. Instagram-like photo filters can be applied to photos, and it’s now easier to share multiple photos, just like you can with the Facebook Photo app. It also allows multiple photo uploading.

    The update is available for download from the App Store.

  • Facebook Shares Jump Finally!

    Facebook Shares Jump Finally!

     facebook

    Facebook Inc’s shares headed towards their biggest one-day jump on Wednesday after the company reported a surprising rise in mobile advertising, easing concerns it was having trouble capitalizing on soaring use of smartphones and tablets.

    Facebook shares, sold for $38 each in their initial public offering in May, were up 20 percent at $23.61 in late morning trade. The stock was the top percentage gainer on the Nasdaq.

    Several brokerages raised their price targets on Facebook shares. Barclays Capital raised its target to $26 from $23, Jefferies & Co to $32 from $30 and Macquarie Equities Research to $24 from $21.

    Facebook, which reported third-quarter results on Tuesday, said it now gets 14 percent of its advertising revenue from mobile ads, a far bigger increase than mostly skeptical analysts had expected.

    Mobile advertising has been a key investor concern hanging over Facebook, shaving more than $50 billion off its market value since its IPO.

    The world’s largest social network passed 1 billion active users in September but failed to dispel doubts about its mobile strategy.

    Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said on Tuesday that the mobile opportunity was “the most misunderstood” aspect of Facebook’s business.

    Rivals such as Google Inc are also struggling with a shift in consumer preference to mobiles from PCs.

    Marrisa Mayer, chief executive of struggling internet pioneer Yahoo Inc, said on Monday her top priority was to fashion a coherent strategy to manage the industry’s transition to mobile devices.

    Facebook said that some advertisers had pulled money out of desktop campaigns in favor of mobile, which caused desktop ad revenue to decline sequentially.

    Over time, Facebook’s growing expertise in mobile advertising, combined with more user data, will drive mobile monetization for the company, Colin Sebastian, an analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co, wrote on a note.

    Sebastian has an “outperform” rating on the stock and a price target of $32.

    Analysts were also positive about the company’s ability to add advertising revenue from new streams.

    “Facebook has the potential to utilize user data to better match its users with advertisers,” Wedbush Securities Inc analyst Michael Pachter, who has an “outperform” rating on the stock with a $35 price target, wrote in a note.

    Needham & Co analyst Laura Martin said Facebook had opportunities to increase branded advertising revenue as top brands increase their association with the company in some form.

    Facebook’s advertising revenue increased by 36 percent to $1.09 billion in the third quarter.

    Facebook had a painful trading debut in May as investors fretted about its slowing revenue growth and the large pool of additional shares set to hit the market as “lock-up” restrictions on employee share sales expired.

    “The stock has seen its lows and should be able to withstand the coming share lockups,” Wells Fargo Securities analyst Jason Maynard said in a note to clients.

  • Facebook for Android Gets Updated

    Facebook for Android Gets Updated

    facebook

    Facebook for Android is now available for download in version 1.9.11, and, while the latest update is not very special compared with recent ones, it does come with three straightforward and important changes.

    Photo functionality should be improved with these three tweaks, which allow for faster photo tagging and a better organizing of your pics in albums. Finally, there’s also the customary bug fix, which this time helps solve a problem that was restricting “people using certain languages” from uploading images from time to time.

    For an app build almost entirely in HTML5, Facebook for Android is actually quite spritely, especially when run on more modern hardware. We’re excited for the day when Facebook for Android is built on native code, but for the time being enjoy your improved photo uploading experience.

    Facebook also made the “biggest overhaul of [its] Android SDK so far,” making it easier for developers to integrate the social network into third-party apps. These features include the Friend Picker and Places Picker, which apps can use to access the Open Grap in more comprehensive ways.

  • No plans To Release Instagram for Blackberry 10, Says Facebook

    No plans To Release Instagram for Blackberry 10, Says Facebook

    Instagram

    In what could turn out to be a considerable blow to RIM’s upcoming operating system, Venturebeat has learned that Facebook has no intention of bringing its popular Instagram app to BlackBerry 10. While RIM has promised native apps from social network leaders such as Twitter, LinkedIn, Foursquare and, of course, Facebook, a company insider has shared that at least for the time being there are no plans to do the same for Instagram.

    As much as non-users tend to dismiss Instagram as a silly little photo app, the fact is that there are over 100 million users posting thousands of photos per hour, all from just two platforms. While the iPhone provided the amniotic fluid in which Instagram gestated, its expansion to Android has been the true catalyst for growth, adding nearly 70 million users since April.

    But for RIM, getting application makers to build for the platform is arguably the single most important factor to determining whether consumers go back to (or discover) BlackBerry, especially if task management flow is all the platform has to set it apart from iOS and Android. RIM has been providing thousands of developers with beta devices, dubbed Dev Alpha, on which they’ve been tasked to build the very apps that users will have access to at launch. They’re already accepting apps, despite the fact that the first devices will launch in Q1 2013.

    However, Kevin Michaluk from CrackBerry on Monday disputed the report. Michaeluk has a well established track record reporting on RIM, and said that his sources have confirmed that RIM’s relationship with Facebook is still solid. He added that we “will see Instagram come to Blackberry 10.” He said he’s so confident that, if he’s wrong, he’s willing to buy somebody a car!

    More on this to come! 

  • Facebook To Charge Users To “Promote” Content

    Facebook To Charge Users To “Promote” Content

    For all those frequenting Facebook, the social networking website can now turn into a forum for promoting themselves as by paying a few bucks, people can now use the media for highlighting something they want to.

    If you want more of your friends to see your funny one liner or personal announcement, pony up little cash and you will get more visibility. Although the price has not yet been fixed but Facebook already soft-launched its latest paid product ‘promoted posts’ yesterday as part of its effort to mop up more revenues,  charging users $7 to make their friends more likely to see their personal posts..

    [quote]“When you promote a post – whether it’s wedding photos, a garage sale, or big news – you bump it higher in news feed so your friends and subscribers are more likely to notice it,” wrote Facebook’s Abhishek Doshi in a post announcing the test.[/quote]

    For now, at least, the test is limited to people with fewer than 5,000 friends and subscribers.

    Of course, Facebook controls the algorithm for what shows up in members’ News Feeds, and in theory should already be running it in a way that shows us just the most interesting content. But owning the News Feed also means they can make money off of it from marketers – and now from members.

    The service echoes one that Facebook first rolled out in New Zealand right before its IPO.

  • Government Blocks Facebook, YouTube in Kashmir

    Government Blocks Facebook, YouTube in Kashmir

    There are reports that the Indian government has blocked Facebook and YouTube in Kashmir. The story was first reported by GreaterKashmir which said that, ISP companies blocked social networking sites including Facebook and YouTube in Kashmir without any official directive the state government.

    The cellular companies have also blocked GPRS facilities on the mobile telephones causing immense inconvenience to the subscribers.  Greater Kashmir received over a dozen telephone calls from different areas of the Valley, complaining that the internet service has been blocked by companies including BSNL, Reliance, Aircel, Airtel and Vodafone.

    It was previously reported that the certain URLs with offensive content had been blocked, but it now seems that access to the entire websites have been restricted. Last month the Government of Jammu & Kashmir had directed service providers to ensure that the controversial YouTube video was not accessible from the state.

  • MySpace Ready to Return to Social Network Wars with Sleek new Interface (Video)

    MySpace Ready to Return to Social Network Wars with Sleek new Interface (Video)

    MySpace is ready to become popular once again, and it just might do exactly that with its sleek new looking interface. Check out the video which shows that the company after a major rebrand is ready to get back into the game. The sleek interface is quite appealing and you can sign up for a preview at the link below.

    [Myspace]

  • Facebook Making Efforts To Close Fake Accounts

    Facebook Making Efforts To Close Fake Accounts

    Facebook is making a “huge effort” to weed out fake profiles to prevent misuse of such identities, a senior company official has said.

    [quote] “Absolutely, there is a huge effort,” Facebook India business manager Pavan Varma told PTI when asked about the company’s action on this front. The doubt about the authenticity of the account will arise if an account has a generic name instead of a proper name, uses images of celebrities/ cartoon characters as display pictures, or does not have “enough friends”, Varma said.  [/quote]

    “It could even be that Facebook comes back to you saying, could you help us identify yourself if you don’t have enough friends, because we don’t want fake identities,” he said.

    “We are worried about the experience we deliver…It’s not about protecting our brand identity so much,” he said.

    As reported earlier, Facebook is also making efforts to crackdown on “Fake Likes” companies try to get on their pages.

    [Economic Times]

  • Nokia Lumia 920 to include wireless charging, 32GB storage, and 8-megapixel camera

    Nokia Lumia 920 to include wireless charging, 32GB storage, and 8-megapixel camera

    According to a report by The Verge, Nokia, which is all set to launch its Lumia 920 smartphone powered by Windows 8 OS tomorrow in New York,  will include wireless charging with the phone. The smartphone will have a PureView Camera although the megapixel capacity will be much less than the original PureView smartphone. An image of the charging pad of Nokia was leaked on Twitter via @evleaks, the same account that leaked the original image of the Lumia 920.

    It is also believed that the Nokia Lumia 920 will have a 1.5GHz dual-core processor, 1GB of RAM and 32GB of storage along with a 4.5-inch HD display.

    If the report is true, then Nokia has finally dished out a phone capable of challenging the big guns of this segment.

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