App clash: Instagram shuts off Twitter feature

10 Dec, 2012

The smartphone app Instagram turned off a feature on December 5 that allowed easier photo viewing for Twitter users, in a move that pushes the two popular tech platforms farther apart. "Users are experiencing issues with viewing Instagram photos on Twitter," San Francisco-based Twitter said in a status update.
"This is due to Instagram disabling its Twitter cards integration, and as a result, photos are being displayed using a pre-cards experience," the message continued. "So, when users click on Tweets with an Instagram link, photos appear cropped."
The change was evidently a move by Instagram, which has some 100 million users, to route photo viewers to its own website, where it has the potential to make money from ads or other mechanisms, instead of letting Twitter get the benefits.
Previously, Instagram pictures shared in messages "tweeted" from smartphones could be viewed unaltered at Twitter.
Instagram rose to stardom with the help of Twitter, but has distanced itself from the one-to-many text messaging service since being acquired by leading social network Facebook.
Facebook completed its acquisition of Instagram in September. The original price was pegged at $1 billion but the final value was less because of a decline in Facebook's share price.
Instagram last month was given a Facebook spin with the roll-out of online profiles that let people showcase themselves and photos they've taken with the smartphone application.

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