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Instagram adds 3:4 aspect ratio for uncropped, full-frame photo sharing
Instagram adds 3:4 aspect ratio for uncropped, full-frame photo sharing

Mint

time3 days ago

  • Mint

Instagram adds 3:4 aspect ratio for uncropped, full-frame photo sharing

In a notable update aimed at enhancing user experience, Instagram has officially introduced support for 3:4 aspect ratio photographs on its platform. The change aligns with the default setting found on most smartphone cameras, allowing users to upload images without needing to crop them to fit Instagram's previously supported dimensions. Announced by Instagram head Adam Mosseri via Threads—Meta's microblogging service—the update means that photos taken in the 3:4 format will now appear on the platform exactly as captured. This new compatibility is available for both single-image uploads and carousel posts. You may be interested in 'For those posting photos in 3:4, they will now be displayed just as you shot them,' Mosseri said, highlighting the platform's push to better accommodate mobile photography. Until now, Instagram primarily supported square (1:1) and slightly vertical (5:4 or 4:5) aspect ratios. Although those formats will continue to be supported, users capturing photos in the standard 3:4 format often found themselves forced to crop their images, potentially losing important visual details. The newly introduced format ensures a fuller display of original content, as seen in comparison images shared via Instagram's creator broadcast channel. The platform has also been expanding its suite of content creation tools. Last month, Instagram launched a dedicated video editing application called Edits. Positioned as a competitor to ByteDance's popular CapCut app, Edits allows creators to edit videos on their smartphones and export them to various platforms without watermarks—making it a versatile tool for content creators. Additionally, Instagram recently introduced the Blend feature. Designed to personalise content discovery within messages, Blend offers an invite-only feed that recommends Reels based on shared user interests and activity. After a year of testing, the feature is now available on both iOS and Android versions of the app. These latest updates underline Instagram's continued efforts to enhance usability and creative flexibility for its global user base, whether by matching default camera settings or by expanding content creation and sharing capabilities.

Instagram head Adam Mosseri on the 'paradigm shift' from posting in public to sharing in private
Instagram head Adam Mosseri on the 'paradigm shift' from posting in public to sharing in private

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Instagram head Adam Mosseri on the 'paradigm shift' from posting in public to sharing in private

Why does Instagram want to show you stuff it thinks you'll like instead of letting you pick for yourself? And why is Instagram focused on getting people to share photos and videos privately? The two ideas are connected, Instagram boss Adam Mosseri explains: Normal people simply aren't sharing as much in public as they used to. Adam Mosseri's official title is head of Instagram, Meta's massive photo and video app. He also runs Threads, the Twitter clone the company launched two years ago. Unofficially, he's become one of Meta's chief explainers, frequently jumping on social media to defend and proselytize on behalf of his employer. So when I got a chance to interview Mosseri, I had a long list of questions about… lots of things: I wanted to know how Mosseri felt about the company's recent pivot to Trump-friendly policies, and how he looked at TikTok, and a million other things. I didn't have enough time to get to everything, but I got to a lot of it, and you can hear our whole conversation on my Channels podcast. In the edited excerpt below, Mosseri and I go over some big-picture stuff that tells you a lot about the current state of social media: Like why Instagram, Facebook and every other social media platform rely on algorithms to show you stuff they thinks you like, instead of relying on users to program their own experience. And why the company is gung-ho on getting users to privately send each other photos and videos, instead of its initial focus — getting them to post stuff on a public feed. And I also wanted to know about the backstory behind Threads — the text-based social network it launched just as Elon Musk was taking over Twitter. Mosseri was happy to talk about all of it. Peter Kafka: In the first few years of social media feeds, users would see a list of everything that everyone they were following had posted, in chronological order. Now, the standard at every app is a curated, algorithmic feed. Why does everyone who runs a social media product think that's better? Adam Mosseri: It's because it's the only way to grow these experiences. The amount of content people post publicly in feeds is going down across the entire industry, because people are moving more and more sharing to stories — which you could argue is a different kind of feed — but even more into messaging, group chats, one-on-one chats. On Instagram, there are way more photos and videos shared into DMs than into stories, and way more photos and videos are shared into stories than into the feed. So if the amount of content you have to rank is decreasing — how engaging the feed is is also just decreasing. It's just getting worse. We show recommendations because you might follow 200 accounts and one in 10 of them posted. So we've [only] got 20 things [to show you]. And we can reorder those 20 things 20 factorial ways, but that's only so much upside. Whereas if we look at the billion things posted in a given day and we find something you're interested in, there's more upside. Instagram has been encouraging messaging. It's something you've been talking about for a while. It's something users were doing on their own, and now you guys are responding to it? Oh yeah. It's a paradigm shift. The thing you hear is that people are going to chats because they feel like that's safer or they can have more candor. But are regular people literally thinking about how their posts are gonna be received? Is there some other reason people are sharing more privately versus publicly? The foundational reason is that there are more things that you would feel comfortable saying to somebody one-on-one than things you would feel comfortable sharing publicly. This is a weirdly sad example, but you could think of sharing in-feed as standing on top of your roof, yelling something at a hundred people, and hoping that 20 people hear it. There's some things I would do that for. But the average thing — the amount of things I would say to you on a phone call, my wife on a phone call, my best friend on a phone call — there's a lot more of those things. I think that's the most important reason. How does that shift affect the business of Meta? It moves more and more of that friend content into private experiences. And then the question is, can you either make those private sharing experiences symbiotic with the ones that we monetize — like feed and stories? Or can you monetize those experiences directly? For Instagram, the thing that has been amazing is that we have leaned into video in a way that actually grows messaging. When I worked on the Facebook app, we leaned a lot into video in 2014, 15, 16. We were very focused on trying to catch up with YouTube, and growing video grew the amount of time spent in the Facebook app — but it decreased everything else. It decreased messages, comments, likes, and revenue — because there's less ads per minute. [But] with Reels on Instagram, because they're short and because they're entertaining… I'll see a standup comic doing a bit that I love and I'll send it to my brother, because I know he's going to enjoy it. Or I'll see a piece on politics and I'll send it to you. Because I think you might be interested in it. And then you and I talk, maybe you look at your feed, maybe you engage with something else. Maybe you send that to somebody else. So there is a private messaging part of the experience, [but] we've managed to build it in a way that's very symbiotic with the public context — like feed and stories and reels, which we monetize directly with ads. We're going to show you engaging stuff, you're going engage in it, and we'll be able to monetize your eyeballs like we always have — and then you'll share it with other people. It's a positive feedback loop. And it's important particularly for Instagram because we are about connecting with your friends over creative things. I mean, for some people, we might be a pure entertainment-based or public content-based app. But we want friend content to continue to be a core part of the experience for most users. And this allows Instagram to stay social, but still grow as a business. I wanted to ask you about the Threads origin story. I didn't realize that it was originally supposed to be a feature within Instagram. We were talking about different ways to compete more directly with Twitter… Why? I know that back around 2010, the two services were fiercely competitive. And then basically that competition stopped, because you guys just lapped Twitter over and over and you won. There were many more people who wanted to engage in a Facebook and Instagram-like experience than they did on Twitter. So why bother going back to Twitter? I think Twitter's a great app in a lot of ways. I use Twitter a lot, still. I think it's better for public conversations. Even though it's not the biggest app, there's a lot of cultural relevance. There's a lot of really vibrant, amazing communities there — NBA Twitter, black Twitter there. There's these insular networks like VC Twitter and crypto Twitter. And part of what we care about at Instagram is being a place where creatives do their thing. And the initial thought was to bolt it onto Instagram? Around that time we really accelerated our work on broadcast channels on WhatsApp and on Instagram and on Messenger — which by the way, are a big deal in a lot of the rest of the world, particularly popularized by Telegram. We looked at and had a bunch of designs for building something like Threads as a tab into Instagram. And we did consider and ended up building a separate app, and there were a lot of contentious debates. What did want to do? Where did you want what's now called Threads to live? I was excited about channels. But Mark [Zuckerberg] made the point — and I agreed with him — that channels are not going to be a place where you keep up with tons and tons of culturally relevant people. They're going to be a place where you subscribe to the five or 10 you care about most. I was more bullish on building something within Instagram. Mark's point was that a separate app will be harder — but if it was successful, it would be a more valuable thing to create in the world. A lot of what Mark does is anchor us really high. And no matter how strong a year we have, the question is always — how can we do better? It was late. I was in Italy for my anniversary with my wife, and [Mark's] like, "Well, if you were gonna do something bigger, what would you do?" So I was riffing and I kind of pitched a version of Threads: We'll lean on Instagram's strength with creators. We'll use Instagram identity. You can bootstrap it with [Instragram's social] graph, but we'll focus on basic replies and threads. I called it Textagram as a joke. Which unfortunately stuck as a name for months before I managed to kill it. And Mark's like, "Yeah, that's a good idea. We should do that." And I was like, "I don't think we should do that." And in the classic Mark move, he said, "OK. But if you don't do it, I'll have somebody else do it, and it'll be built on Instagram." And I said, "OK. Sounds like I'm signed up." So he gets the credit. Read the original article on Business Insider

Instagram head Adam Mosseri on the 'paradigm shift' from posting in public to sharing in private
Instagram head Adam Mosseri on the 'paradigm shift' from posting in public to sharing in private

Business Insider

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Insider

Instagram head Adam Mosseri on the 'paradigm shift' from posting in public to sharing in private

Adam Mosseri's official title is head of Instagram, Meta's massive photo and video app. He also runs Threads, the Twitter clone the company launched two years ago. Unofficially, he's become one of Meta's chief explainers, frequently jumping on social media to defend and proselytize on behalf of his employer. So when I got a chance to interview Mosseri, I had a long list of questions about… lots of things: I wanted to know how Mosseri felt about the company's recent pivot to Trump-friendly policies, and how he looked at TikTok, and a million other things. I didn't have enough time to get to everything, but I got to a lot of it, and you can hear our whole conversation on my Channels podcast. In the edited excerpt below, Mosseri and I go over some big-picture stuff that tells you a lot about the current state of social media: Like why Instagram, Facebook and every other social media platform rely on algorithms to show you stuff they thinks you like, instead of relying on users to program their own experience. And why the company is gung-ho on getting users to privately send each other photos and videos, instead of its initial focus — getting them to post stuff on a public feed. And I also wanted to know about the backstory behind Threads — the text-based social network it launched just as Elon Musk was taking over Twitter. Mosseri was happy to talk about all of it. Peter Kafka: In the first few years of social media feeds, users would see a list of everything that everyone they were following had posted, in chronological order. Now, the standard at every app is a curated, algorithmic feed. Why does everyone who runs a social media product think that's better? Adam Mosseri: It's because it's the only way to grow these experiences. The amount of content people post publicly in feeds is going down across the entire industry, because people are moving more and more sharing to stories — which you could argue is a different kind of feed — but even more into messaging, group chats, one-on-one chats. On Instagram, there are way more photos and videos shared into DMs than into stories, and way more photos and videos are shared into stories than into the feed. So if the amount of content you have to rank is decreasing — how engaging the feed is is also just decreasing. It's just getting worse. We show recommendations because you might follow 200 accounts and one in 10 of them posted. So we've [only] got 20 things [to show you]. And we can reorder those 20 things 20 factorial ways, but that's only so much upside. Whereas if we look at the billion things posted in a given day and we find something you're interested in, there's more upside. Instagram has been encouraging messaging. It's something you've been talking about for a while. It's something users were doing on their own, and now you guys are responding to it? Oh yeah. It's a paradigm shift. The thing you hear is that people are going to chats because they feel like that's safer or they can have more candor. But are regular people literally thinking about how their posts are gonna be received? Is there some other reason people are sharing more privately versus publicly? The foundational reason is that there are more things that you would feel comfortable saying to somebody one-on-one than things you would feel comfortable sharing publicly. This is a weirdly sad example, but you could think of sharing in-feed as standing on top of your roof, yelling something at a hundred people, and hoping that 20 people hear it. There's some things I would do that for. But the average thing — the amount of things I would say to you on a phone call, my wife on a phone call, my best friend on a phone call — there's a lot more of those things. I think that's the most important reason. How does that shift affect the business of Meta? It moves more and more of that friend content into private experiences. And then the question is, can you either make those private sharing experiences symbiotic with the ones that we monetize — like feed and stories? Or can you monetize those experiences directly? For Instagram, the thing that has been amazing is that we have leaned into video in a way that actually grows messaging. When I worked on the Facebook app, we leaned a lot into video in 2014, 15, 16. We were very focused on trying to catch up with YouTube, and growing video grew the amount of time spent in the Facebook app — but it decreased everything else. It decreased messages, comments, likes, and revenue — because there's less ads per minute. [But] with Reels on Instagram, because they're short and because they're entertaining… I'll see a standup comic doing a bit that I love and I'll send it to my brother, because I know he's going to enjoy it. Or I'll see a piece on politics and I'll send it to you. Because I think you might be interested in it. And then you and I talk, maybe you look at your feed, maybe you engage with something else. Maybe you send that to somebody else. So there is a private messaging part of the experience, [but] we've managed to build it in a way that's very symbiotic with the public context — like feed and stories and reels, which we monetize directly with ads. We're going to show you engaging stuff, you're going engage in it, and we'll be able to monetize your eyeballs like we always have — and then you'll share it with other people. It's a positive feedback loop. And it's important particularly for Instagram because we are about connecting with your friends over creative things. I mean, for some people, we might be a pure entertainment-based or public content-based app. But we want friend content to continue to be a core part of the experience for most users. And this allows Instagram to stay social, but still grow as a business. I wanted to ask you about the Threads origin story. I didn't realize that it was originally supposed to be a feature within Instagram. We were talking about different ways to compete more directly with Twitter… Why? I know that back around 2010, the two services were fiercely competitive. And then basically that competition stopped, because you guys just lapped Twitter over and over and you won. There were many more people who wanted to engage in a Facebook and Instagram-like experience than they did on Twitter. So why bother going back to Twitter? I think Twitter's a great app in a lot of ways. I use Twitter a lot, still. I think it's better for public conversations. Even though it's not the biggest app, there's a lot of cultural relevance. There's a lot of really vibrant, amazing communities there — NBA Twitter, black Twitter there. There's these insular networks like VC Twitter and crypto Twitter. And part of what we care about at Instagram is being a place where creatives do their thing. And the initial thought was to bolt it onto Instagram? Around that time we really accelerated our work on broadcast channels on WhatsApp and on Instagram and on Messenger — which by the way, are a big deal in a lot of the rest of the world, particularly popularized by Telegram. We looked at and had a bunch of designs for building something like Threads as a tab into Instagram. And we did consider and ended up building a separate app, and there were a lot of contentious debates. What did you want to do? Where did you want what's now called Threads to live? I was excited about channels. But Mark [Zuckerberg] made the point — and I agreed with him — that channels are not going to be a place where you keep up with tons and tons of culturally relevant people. They're going to be a place where you subscribe to the five or 10 you care about most. I was more bullish on building something within Instagram. Mark's point was that a separate app will be harder — but if it was successful, it would be a more valuable thing to create in the world. A lot of what Mark does is anchor us really high. And no matter how strong a year we have, the question is always — how can we do better? It was late. I was in Italy for my anniversary with my wife, and [Mark's] like, "Well, if you were gonna do something bigger, what would you do?" So I was riffing and I kind of pitched a version of Threads: We'll lean on Instagram's strength with creators. We'll use Instagram identity. You can bootstrap it with [Instragram's social] graph, but we'll focus on basic replies and threads. I called it Textagram as a joke. Which unfortunately stuck as a name for months before I managed to kill it. And Mark's like, "Yeah, that's a good idea. We should do that." And I was like, "I don't think we should do that." And in the classic Mark move, he said, "OK. But if you don't do it, I'll have somebody else do it, and it'll be built on Instagram." And I said, "OK. Sounds like I'm signed up." So he gets the credit.

Instagram is giving up to $20,000 to creators in the US, here's why
Instagram is giving up to $20,000 to creators in the US, here's why

Time of India

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Instagram is giving up to $20,000 to creators in the US, here's why

Instagram is reportedly testing a referral program aimed at incentivising creators to drive traffic and generate new sign-ups. According to a Business Insider report, the invite-only program is called the 'Referrals' and offers as much as $20,000 to US-based Instagram content creators. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Notably, this is not the first time Meta has paid creators. Earlier this year, it offered bonuses ranging from $2,500 to $50,000 to encourage TikTok creators to share exclusive content on Instagram. Instagram Referrals program details As mentioned in the Business Insider report, the 'Referrals' program will run through six weeks from May to June. It is aimed to lure users on rival platforms – TikTok, YouTube, Substack, Discord and others to Instagram. Instagram creators report seeing the message that reads: 'Share your Instagram profile, reels, posts, stories, and channels 'off Instagram'.' There are two types of payments in the program. Some creators will earn $100 for each new eligible user who signs up through their referral link, while others will receive $100 for every 1,000 eligible visits to the app generated by their shared links. According to the report, payouts are capped at $20,000. Meta is working with a third-party provider, Glimmer, to handle the payments, the report states. In a related news, Instagram chief Adam Mosseri recently testified in Meta's high-stakes antitrust trial, revealing tensions between Facebook's leadership and Instagram's founders that ultimately led to their departure in 2018. During more than six hours of testimony, Mosseri disclosed that while on paternity leave, he warned CEO Mark Zuckerberg about deteriorating relations with Instagram cofounders Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now "It was hard for me to get a read on what's going on as the relationship was strained," Mosseri wrote in the 2018 email, acting as mediator between the increasingly frustrated founders and Facebook leadership. The conflict centered on Zuckerberg's strategy decisions, which Instagram's founders believed were deliberately constraining their platform's growth to benefit Facebook's core business.

How to get a job at Meta? Instagram head Adam Mosseri shares three qualities he looks for in new hires beyond the resume
How to get a job at Meta? Instagram head Adam Mosseri shares three qualities he looks for in new hires beyond the resume

Time of India

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

How to get a job at Meta? Instagram head Adam Mosseri shares three qualities he looks for in new hires beyond the resume

Mosseri lists three key qualities he looks for Mosseri tried Indian snacks A broader India visit with cultural moments Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel During his recent appearance on the Moment of Silence podcast with Indian content creators Naina Bhan and Sakshi Shivdasani, Instagram head Adam Mosseri not only explored Indian snacks and sweets but also shared insights into his hiring approach at Instagram. While tasting traditional Indian food, Mosseri also spoke about the key traits he values in potential team about hiring, Mosseri mentioned that he looks beyond just qualifications and work experience. He identified three traits that matter most to him in a candidate. 'Hustle or real motivation,' he said, referring to the need for strong drive and initiative. The second quality he mentioned was being a 'quick learner,' highlighting the importance of adaptability. Lastly, he added, 'humility and self-awareness' as a crucial factor in building a good said that if they work hard they are going to learn quickly and listening to feedback makes good podcast featured a light segment where Mosseri tried Indian snacks such as Lay's Magic Masala chips, Kaaju Barfi, and Laddoos. Commenting on the chips, he said, 'It's tasty; I thought it was going to be crazy spicy.' While enjoying Kaaju Barfi, he said, 'It's very tasty,' and he expressed his liking for Laddoos as well. Talking about his children, he added, 'My kids would steal a bunch, except for the middle one, as he doesn't like sweets.'Earlier, at the WAVES 2025 summit in Mumbai, Mosseri was welcomed by Bollywood actor Shraddha Kapoor during a session titled Trends and Virality. Before the talk, Kapoor offered him a homemade Maharashtrian dessert. 'I know you've been eating at fancy places and trying Indian food. I want you to try this Maharashtrian dessert called Puran Poli. It is made at my home,' she 2025 was India's first international summit focused on the audio-visual and entertainment sectors. Mosseri's participation reflects Meta's growing connection with Indian creators and digital audiences.

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