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What Facebook’s Instagram Purchase Means for Users

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Hot on the heels of Instagram for Android’s release, Facebook announced that it has acquired Instagram for $1 billion in stock options.

Instagram is a photo editing and sharing app for Android and iPhone which allows users to apply artistic filters to photos and share them on Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr. Instagram is also a growing social network with over 27 million users sharing photos between devices.

Facebook is a leading social network with a focus on sharing photos, so the purchase of Instagram isn’t that surprising, even if the $1 billion price is.

Same Team, Same Sharing

Facebook Buys InstagramFacebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg shared news of the purchase on his Facebook page, where he shares good news for Instagram users.

The Instagram team is staying on to continue growing the app. Without the team’s vision and leadership, the Instagram experience could be lost. Facebook makes it easy to share photos with friends and family, but the company hasn’t ventured into mobile photo editing or dedicated photo apps.

Zuckerberg knows that Instagram users love to share photos on many social networks. To avoid the backlash of angry Instagram users, which can get nasty, Zuckerberg makes it clear that Instagram will continue to support sharing to other social networks.

Zuckerberg writes:

We think the fact that Instagram is connected to other services beyond Facebook is an important part of the experience. We plan on keeping features like the ability to post to other social networks, the ability to not share your Instagrams on Facebook if you want, and the ability to have followers and follow people separately from your friends on Facebook.

Instagram benefits from the access to Facebook infrastructure and engineers, which will help the app continue growing. A strong backend is important considering the addition of 1 million new Instagram users within 24 hours of the Instagram for Android launch.

Facebook users should prepare for an onslaught of filtered photos. Even thought the app won’t be built into Facebook overnight, the increased exposure means even more users will be uploading Lo-Fi photos to their timelines.

What We Don’t Know Yet

It’s great to know that Facebook is going to support the sharing of photos with other social networks, but there is a lot that we don’t know.

Future versions of the Instagram app may require users to sign in with a Facebook login instead of an Instagram username. Most Instagram users won’t care, but not everyone wants to link up their Facebook account to a photo app.

The upside to this might be that Instagram users have a better online place to look at all of their photos. There are Instagram pages for shared photos, but no way to explore the users other photos on the web. Facebook strives to be the best at photo sharing, so we may see this functionality added sooner rather than later.

Another addition we might see, though it won’t happen overnight, is Instagram for Facebook. I don’t see Facebook spending $1 billion on a company if they don’t have plans to make the service available to every Facebook users. Instagram is only available on iPhone and Android right now, with little hope of a Windows Phone version in the near future. Couple that with only half of mobile phones being smartphones, and there’s a lot of Facebook users without the ability to filter their photos.

Are you excited about this?

3 Comments

3 Comments

  1. Dan

    04/10/2012 at 12:42 am

    I guess this is a smart move by Facebook. Rather than creating photo apps for mobile users, why not use what’s already popular? 

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