Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Jayapal accuses Facebook of threatening to clone Instagram before buying it

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

In Wednesday’s House Judiciary hearing on antitrust issues in Big Tech, Representative Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) grilled Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg over his company’s practice of acquiring competitors and adapting popular rival products within Facebook’s infrastructure.

Recommended Videos

In a heated exchange, Jayapal pushed Zuckerberg on the details surrounding Facebook’s purchase of Instagram.

“I would just like to remind you that you are under oath and that there are quotes from Facebook’s own documents,” said Jayapal, who added that prior to acquiring Instagram in 2012 for $1 billion, Facebook was in the process of developing its own mobile camera app called Facebook Camera.

Read more: Big Tech CEOs testify before Congress: Live updates and analysis

“Congresswoman, that’s correct,” said Zuckerberg in response to her question about developing a similar app to Instagram in early 2012. “I’ve said multiple times that we were in the space of competing with building mobile cameras with Instagram, that is what they did at the time.”

Facebook has long been accused of cloning features from competitors — Facebook turned Snapchat’s trademark disappearing photo messages into Instagram Stories and is currently in the process of making a product to rival TikTok, the fastest growing app in the world.

Jayapal went on to detail an exchange between Zuckerberg and Instagram founder Kevin Systrom that ultimately led to Systrom to believe that Zuckerberg would go into “destroy mode” if he did not sell Instagram to Facebook — a claim Zuckerberg denied in the hearing.

Before yielding her time, Jayapal said, “Facebook is a case study in, in my opinion, monopoly power because your company harvests and monetizes our data, and then your company uses that data to spy on competitors and to copy, acquire, and kill rivals.”

Meira Gebel
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Meira Gebel is a freelance reporter based in Portland. She writes about tech, social media, and internet culture for Digital…
Reddit comments are getting video replies, and it could be more useful than it sounds
Video comments could make Reddit tutorials and advice threads much more useful
Reddit

Reddit is giving users a new way to respond in threads with video comments. The feature is rolling out to all users starting today, allowing people to record or upload a video directly inside the comment box in supported communities.

At first, the obvious reaction may be wondering why Reddit needs video replies when GIFs already exist. The meme potential is definitely there, but video comments could be far more useful in communities where people are asking for real help, feedback, or demonstrations.

Read more
TikTok is testing voice calls in DMs, because you must talk where you doomscroll
Apparently scrolling, texting, and playing a game in your DMs just wasn't enough.
TikTok app on iPhone.

TikTok appears to be testing voice calling inside direct messages, a move that could put the short-video app in more direct competition with instant messaging apps like Messenger and WhatsApp. Jonah Manzano on X recently spotted the feature and shared screenshots, including an incoming call notification labeled "TikTok Audio" and a phone icon added to the DM interface.

From voice notes to calls

Read more
TikTok’s “Not Interested” buttons fails you in merely a few minutes, finds research
A Northeastern University study found that TikTok's "Not Interested" button is only a temporary fix, with unwanted content returning to your feed within minutes.
TikTok app on phone next to cameras.

If you've been tapping TikTok's "Not Interested" button hoping to reclaim your feed, new research suggests the effort has a shorter shelf life than the platform implies. A study from Northeastern University's Khoury College of Computer Sciences found that the feature provides only temporary relief, with unwanted content resurfacing within minutes after a user stops using it.

How the researchers tested it

Read more