The latest Instagram product, IGTV, which allows posting of longer videos, in part to compete with YouTube, has not had an auspicious start. It was criticised this month after sexually suggestive videos of children were recommended to its users. Facebook has also been under intense pressure this year over the issues of safeguarding customer data and the misuse of its platforms by those wishing to spread fake news, including for political ends. In March, in the week Mr Zuckerberg apologised for the handling of a historic data breach, Facebook ended $58bn (£44bn) lower in value. This, along with increased pressure from competitor platforms, appears to have led Mr Zuckerberg and his core executives to exert more control. It ran counter to the business model the pair had become used to. Mr Systrom had earlier praised the “tremendous freedom” Mr Zuckerberg had allowed since the takeover. They are not the first to jump ship Indeed not. In fact it echoes what happened with WhatsApp. Its chief executive and co-founder Jan Koum said in April he would quit the popular messaging service he co-founded in 2009 and sold to Facebook in 2014. Oddly, Mr Koum’s departure statement is also a direct echo of Mr Systrom’s. Analysts of that move also spoke of clashes with Facebook. Mr Koum’s departure sparked an executive reshuffle that saw the tightening of Mr Zuckerberg’s control over operations. The rise of Instagram Mr Systrom and Mr Krieger met while studying at Stanford University. The two were inspired to create the Instagram app – originally launched just for iPhones in 2010 – by old Polaroid pictures. Instagram had around 30 million users in 2012, the year it was purchased by Facebook for what appeared to be an eye-watering $1bn. It was also ad-free. That changed. But so did the number of users – now more than a billion. The Forbes billionaires list estimates Kevin Systrom’s net worth at $1.4bn. Mike Krieger’s net worth is less. There are no definitive figures, ranging from $100m to $500m. What has the social media chatter been? One Twitter post highlighted the use of the word “again” in Mr Systrom’s “explore our curiosity and creativity again”. “Was it a slight dig from Systrom with the ‘again’? You be the judge (I judge yea),” wrote Kara Swisher. NBC media reporter Dylan Byers wrote that the Instagram pair had saved Mark Zuckerberg. https://twitter.com/DylanByers/status/1044406228343025664 https://twitter.com/profcarroll/status/1044429607611576320 In fact, many posts spoke of the creativity and integrity of the departing pair. https://twitter.com/JoshConstine/status/1044440716414353408 Source: BBC
Instagram co-founders leave firm
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Emmanuel Kwame Amoh is an Online Editor with the current affairs team at Media General, operators of TV3 Ghana, editors.3news.com and more. Email: emmanuel.amoh@editors.3news.com