Meta’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube are getting ready to welcome TikTok users, as the Supreme Court upheld a law that effectively bans the Chinese-owned app from the United States.
Users plan week-long boycott of the platform after it announces the removal of fact-checkers and sparks controversy.
A new report claims that Instagram is offering content creators $50,000 or more to leave TikTok and post on Reels instead.
Meta and Instagram are hoping to capitalize on the uncertainty surrounding ByteDance apps by teasing a new one of their own: Edits. Many creators and indie video editors were shoc
While TikTok already returned its US operations thanks to the massive support the incoming President Donald J. Trump pledged, CapCut is yet to be reinstated and be available on mobile app platforms.
Instagram has come out with its own video editing app called Edits. The app will feature a variety of creative tools and watermark-free exports. It is available for preorder in the iOS App Store and set to launch next month.
Instagram has unveiled a new mobile app called Edits, designed to help creators easily shoot and edit videos on their smartphones.
Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch, X, YouTube, Snapchat, LinkedIn, Dailymotion, Jeuxvideo.com, Rakuten Viber, and Microsoft-hosted consumer services have all signed the “Code
Edits is only available for pre-order download from the Apple App Store. In time, it will become available in the Google Play Store.
Instagram has unveiled a new video editing app called Edits, which aims to fill the void left by CapCut's removal from U.S. app stores
With popular applications missing from the Apple App Store and Google Play Store in the US thanks to a ban (which looks set to be repealed by President Trump once he is sworn in), Facebook and Instagram-owner Meta has swooped in to scoop up content creators left adrift.
Instagram’s Edits offers mobile content creators advanced tools, coinciding with TikTok and CapCut's US app removals.