Why your Facebook feed could look more like Snapchat
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Facebook has just released a new photo uploader that helps users supercharge their images.
The new tool, which just started rolling out on iOS, lets users preview filters by swiping across photos, add overlaid text in various colors, and paste Facebook stickers anywhere on an image – the resemblance to features offered on popular mobile messaging service Snapchat has not been lost on pundits.
“If putting text, swipeable filters, and re-sizable emoji on photos sounds familiar, it might be because that’s exactly what Snapchat does,” technology journalist Josh Constine wrote for TechCrunch.
These latest updates are not Facebook’s first attempt at making the expiring-message trend their own. In 2013, shortly after it bought Instagram for $1 billion, the social network giant offered “close to $3 billion” for Snapchat – an offer that the messaging service turned down, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Since then, Facebook has launched a series of applications designed to outdo Snapchat, but with little success: last year, the social network pulled Poke, an app that let users send quick-to-expire photos, videos, messages, or pokes, from the Apple App Store with little fanfare.
Slingshot, which sends editable, ephemeral messages that users have to “unlock” to send, is still available, but the app’s “pay-to-play” mechanics not only makes it less exciting – it also “raises barriers instead of tearing them down,” The Verge noted.
The new updates may be Facebook’s way of “trying to bake the best of everything else into its own,” Mr. Constine wrote.
iOS users who receive the update on their mobile apps will be able to easily swipe to choose filters for uploaded images, with the left half showing the unedited photo and the right half the photo with the filter applied. A wand icon on the bottom left of the uploaded image leads the user to an enhancement tray that includes options for cropping, tagging, text, and stickers.
“You can type in text, pinch and drag to re-size and move it, and use a color slider to choose a hue,” Constine noted. “Annoyingly, though, you have to write the text and choose the color with your photo blurred in the background, rather than live on the photo itself like with Snapchat.”
Facebook has, of course, said that the new features are simply part of the company’s effort to foster creativity and imagination among its 1.4 billion users.
“People want to be creative when they share experiences with their friends and family on Facebook,” the company said in a statement. “We are rolling out a new place to house all of Facebook’s photo-editing tools, making it even easier to add filters, stickers, or text to your photos.”