Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 January 2017

Golden Globe Awards 2017: Instagram, Facebook, Twitter to be part of red carpet and backstage at the awards

Golden Globe Awards 2017: Instagram, Facebook, Twitter to be part of red carpet and backstage at the awards

Golden Globe Awards 2017: Instagram, Facebook, Twitter to be part of red carpet and backstage at the awards


For the first time, social media giant Facbook and its photo-sharing service Instagram will showcase videos and photos from the red carpet as well as from backstage during the 74th Golden Globe Awards 2017.
In a partnership with the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA), Facebook will let fans watch full 360-degree videos of celebrities’ red-carpet experience while Instagram is teaming up with fashion photography duo Mert and Marcus to shoot the action backstage as the Golden Globe Awards goes live from California on January 8 (4:30AM India time on Monday).

“The goal is to make Facebook and Instagram go-to hubs for video and other content from the Golden Globes and celebrities — and further the company’s broader aims of boosting user engagement and growth on both platforms,” a report in Variety said on Friday.
Twitter has also partnered with HFPA to host a live-stream of the red carpet.
The collaboration comes after Facebook served as an exclusive streaming platform for the 2017 Golden Globes nominations.
Instagram will post photos from the show exclusively to the Golden Globes’ account on Instagram throughout the event.
“Instagram is also curating an exclusive video experience on the app’s “explore” tab that will go live on 8 January. Throughout the day, the Golden Globes channel will present exclusive video content from celebrities, media personalities and industry insiders,” the report added.

Friday, 23 December 2016

Facebook Testing 'Slideshow' Movie Maker Feature on Android

Facebook Testing 'Slideshow' Movie Maker Feature on Android
                                 Facebook Testing 'Slideshow' Movie Maker Feature on Android


Facebook is testing its Slideshow movie maker feature, which lets you post a slideshow of multiple photos and videos with music, on the Android beta app. The Slideshow feature was introduced on iOS in June this year, with a pre-made slide show that could be customised by adding or removing content, whilst also choosing themes on top. The pre-made slide show was created out of at least five photos or videos taken in last 24 hours on its own. Now, Facebook is testing the Slideshow feature on its Android beta app where it will allow users to create their own slideshow and post it.
Facebook introduced its Slideshow feature in its 'Moments' app but it forayed into the company's iOS app in June this year. However, there was a catch that the users could not find any option inside the app to discover and create the slide show, but only when they accidentally happen upon an already posted Slideshow in their News Feed. Then, they just had to tap on 'Try it' to create a Slideshow, customised with Facebook's predefined music. The only other way was the method we mentioned earlier, which would let users customise a pre-made slide show.
With the arrival of the Slideshow feature on the Facebook beta app for Android, you can create your own Slideshow and don't have to explicitly scrolling through your News Feed to find another slideshow, or wait till Facebook generates one for you. Inside the app, tapping on the writing canvas at the top will open into a new window with multiple options like photos, videos, Go Live, Check In etc. There also sits the new Slideshow option, clicking on which will take you to Facebook's Slideshow editor. To make a Slideshow, you need at least three photos that are in your phone and you can preferably choose one of the already given music themes. You can even give the Slideshow a title that will stay at the top. At this moment, you cannot choose a music tune of your choice. Furthermore, you can tag people on the photos within the Slideshow.
After you are done selecting photos and music, clicking on Next at the top right corner creates the Slideshow where you can choose its orientation and trim it according to the preferred time span. If you want your Slideshow to go in HD, there's toggle at the top of the Slideshow to turn it on. This is a part of the Facebook's newly-introduced HD video uploading feature. This feature is still in testing and a broader rollout can be expected to occur soon enough. Recently, Facebook also brought a plethora of new features to its Android app on both beta and stable versions like a floating video widget, offline video downloading among others.

The Narendra Modi government’s requests for user data have gone down, not up 2017

The Narendra Modi government’s requests for user data have gone down, not up 2017

The Narendra Modi government’s requests for user data have gone down, not up
What’s a transparency report?
Edward Snowden revealed the mass surveillance being carried out by US and European government on its citizens in 2013. Since then, companies like Facebook, Google and Microsoft have made it a point to publish yearly “transparency reports” where they tabulate the number of requests for user data that a nation has, well, “requested”.
The data is freely available to the public. Detailed information on these reports isn’t provided and some of these are even muzzled by governments. As a barometer for the state of internet surveillance and censorship however, this data will do just fine.
Since the data is actually available, we went ahead and downloaded Facebook’s transparency report; but we didn’t stop there. In all, we took the data from the transparency reports of Apple, Facebook, GoogleMicrosoft and Twitter and compared it to stats from 2013, when the reports first started coming out.
Google hasn’t yet released its transparency report for 2016, but it did have data from 2009-2015 and that’s what we had to rely on. Google does classify the requests as nudity/obscenity, national security, etc., which was very helpful.
Numbers don’t lie
What if I told you that Pakistan’s requests for user data has jumped up by 2000 percent since 2013 compared to India’s 200 percent rise?
Percentage data requests Tech2 720
Sounds heartening, doesn’t it? And that 27 percent rise doesn’t seem so bad, does it?
However, numbers can lie, but only without context.
Pakistan made only 35 requests for user data in 2013 and around 700 in 2016. India made 3,245 such requests in 2013 and 6,324 in 2016.
Actual data requests Tech2 720
India’s figures are much higher. Putting things in context, however, is the fact that Facebook’s user base in India went from 92 million users in 2013 to 195 million in 2016. As a percentage of the user base, the number of requests for user data has actually gone down. It’s not down by much, a mere 3-7 percent, but it’s enough to prove my point. Bolstering this case is the fact that Facebook only complies with around 50 percent of such requests, and even then, not fully.
Percentage increase in user base Tech2 720
In fact, I’m quite surprised that the number of requests isn’t scaling exponentially with internet penetration.
If you look at saturated western markets, the US alone accounts for half the global take down requests on platforms like Google and Facebook. Facebook’s compliance rate with requests is also over 80 percent in these countries.
Censorship is going down, not up
Looking at content restriction figures (a.k.a. censorship) on Facebook, the number of government requests have gone down 7 times — from around 15,000 to around 2,000 — since H2 2015 and by about 60 percent since 2014 — from around 5000.
Content Takedown requests Tech2 720
Google’s data from 2009 to 2015 does indicate a rise in censorship. However, even these requests haven’t scaled exponentially. In addition, the majority of requests that Google receives are takedown requests related to nudity, copyright violations and violence. This is quite normal.
Censorship data also suggests that India is way behind its western counterparts, with Germany alone sending out double the number of requests India does. France and the US are in another league altogether.
The data from Microsoft, Apple and Twitter is barely significant. Requests for data from Apple and Twitter don’t even hit the 200 mark. Requests from Microsoft are higher, but these numbered between 500-1000 in the first half of this year.
If anything, we’re not doing enough to take advantage of the wealth of information that the internet can provide us.
India has the second largest population in the world, the second largest Facebook user base and the second largest internet population in the world, and it’s the world’s largest democracy. Is it any wonder that tech companies see such a large number of data requests from our country?