Facebook slings new photo/video messaging app

Facebook released the instant messaging app Singshot that enables users to send photos or video to selected friends who can only
Facebook released the instant messaging app Singshot that enables users to send photos or video to selected friends who can only see them if they send an image back

Facebook released Tuesday a new instant messaging app that enables users to send photos or video to selected friends who can only see them if they send an image back.

Slingshot, available for Apple and Android devices, is the second product to come out of the social networking website's Creative Labs ideas laboratory.

"Shoot a photo or video of what you're up to and sling it to a bunch of friends," reads the Slingshot blurb on Apple's iTunes app store.

"They won't be able to see your shot until they sling something back."

Not unlike Snapchat, which Facebook tried but failed to acquire last year for $3 billion, Slingshot photos and video self-destruct after viewing—although there's nothing stopping a recipient from using a smartphone's screenshot feature to copy a photo.

"Photos and videos that don't stick around forever allow for sharing that's more expressive, raw and spontaneous," blogged the app's developers on Slingshot's dedicated www.sling.me website.

"With Slingshot, we saw an opportunity to create something new and different: a space where you can share everyday moments with lots of people at once."

Slingshot comes four months after Paper, the first app out of Creative Labs, which seeks to give Facebook more of a magazine feeling for mobile device users.

© 2014 AFP

Citation: Facebook slings new photo/video messaging app (2014, June 17) retrieved 26 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2014-06-facebook-photovideo-messaging-app.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Facebook names 'mobile messaging' chief

0 shares

Feedback to editors