Apple said apps developed by ByteDance and its subsidiaries would no longer be available for download or updates on the US app store from Sunday.
Mark Zuckerberg, on the Joe Rogan podcast, said that Apple hasn't innovated since Steve Jobs and the iPhone. Here's why he's wrong.
Instagram on Sunday rolled out Edits, a video-editing product that appeared similar to CapCut, which is owned by TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance.
Edits is only available for pre-order download from the Apple App Store. In time, it will become available in the Google Play Store.
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applications missing from the Apple App Store and Google Play Store in the US thanks to a ban (which looks set to be repealed by President Trump once he is sworn in), Facebook and Instagram-owner Meta has swooped in to scoop up content creators left adrift.
In today's Tech Bytes, a new Instagram feature. The TikTok Turbulence meta has announced a new video editing app. It's called Edits, and it's similar to the TikTok editing app, CapCut.
If you're involved in the editing space, you're likely already familiar with CapCut, ByteDance's feature-rich mobile editing software.
Instagram is reportedly taking advantage of TikTok’s absence from app stores by offering creators large bonuses for posting exclusively to Reels. With TikTok’s continued absence from both Apple and Google’s app stores,
The post Instagram launches video-editing app called 'Edits' to rival CapCut appeared first on Android Headlines.
Meta-owned Instagram announced on Sunday the launch of a new video editing app named Edits. The announcement comes after ByteDance’s video editing app, CapCut, was temporarily removed from the Apple App Store and Google Play Store as part of the TikTok ban, though services began restoring from 12 PM ET on Sunday.
Instagram announced a new video editing app, called Edits, on the same day that rival video service TikTok briefly went dark in response to a federal ban. X also touted the launch of a dedicated video tab in its mobile app.