Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Legacy Archives

5 million Instagram videos were shared in the first 24 hours

Add as a preferred source on Google

instagram videoAccording to Instagram reps, the first day was a success: CNET says that app is claiming 5 million videos have been uploaded within the first 24 hours.

Vine teased new features fewer than 24 hours before Instagram video’s launch, but even Vine’s hype did little to stop users from getting business with video for Instagram. During the peak time of new videos uploaded by users after the announcement, up to 40 hours of video were uploaded per minute. Some of its success has to do with Instagram’s well-chosen timing for its announcement: The same day, the Miami Heat took on the San Antonio Spurs for the NBA Championship title, which apparently fueled the flurry of new videos shared within the 24 hours, says the Instagram rep.

Recommended Videos

If you’re still not familiar with the platform, the one major difference between Vine and Instagram is the ability to add 13 different video filters using the latter. Vine is filter-less and probably will stay that way. Instagram does also include a brand new technology called “Cinema,” which offers image stabilization for those of us with shaky hands. Users can delete individual clips in a video, granted the clip wasn’t shot in one take. Other than those two distinguishing features, the last major difference is the recording time – 15 seconds on Instagram and just 6 seconds on Vine.

While video for Instagram may be reacting to what Vine started with bite-sized, clip-friendly videos, it’s obvious that the established community Instagram has is aiding the launch of the new service. Motivations be damned, the photo-sharing app could have a winner on its hands. Of course, we’ve yet to see the teased features Vine started yesterday off with, so perhaps the Twitter-owned platform has something up its sleeve that could heighten the competition. 

Let the battles begin.

Francis Bea
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Francis got his first taste of the tech industry in a failed attempt at a startup during his time as a student at the…
YouTube is giving creators a new weapon against AI deepfakes
Phone in hand showing YouTube logo

AI-generated videos are getting so realistic now that spotting a fake version of someone online is becoming harder by the week. And for creators, that opens up a pretty uncomfortable problem: what happens when your face starts appearing in videos you never made? YouTube seems to be taking that concern seriously.

The platform is now expanding its AI likeness detection system to a much larger group of creators, giving eligible users new tools to track and report videos that digitally imitate them using artificial intelligence. The feature was previously limited to a smaller pilot group within the YouTube Partner Program, but YouTube says it will begin rolling it out to all eligible creators over 18 in the coming weeks.

Read more
Spotted a mistake on your Instagram Story? You can finally edit it after posting
Instagram's new Edit Story feature means no more deleting and starting over.
instagram-story-edit-feature

We have all posted an Instagram Story with a typo and had no choice but to delete the whole thing and start over. Those days may be finally be behind you.

Instagram is finally rolling out the ability to edit a Story after it has already been posted. It seems to be a limited rollout for now. Social media consultant Matt Navarra was among the first to flag it on X.

Read more
Meta is testing an AI bot to unleash the same online stupidity that is AskGrok on X
Threads is getting its own version of AskGrok, and it is already controversial.
meta-ai-chatbot-threads

If you have ever been on X and watched someone tag Grok under a viral post asking "is this real???" – congratulations, Threads is about to give you the exact same experience.

Meta is testing a new feature that gives its AI chatbot a dedicated Threads account, @meta.ai, that users can tag directly inside posts and replies. The bot will then respond publicly with added context, recommendations, or information on whatever is being discussed.

Read more