Users Must Have 1,000 Followers Upwards, to go Live on Instagram
Instagram has said that to go live on the site, users must now have a public account with at least 1,000 followers.
The decision would hurt normal users who like going live with their friends for pleasure as well as smaller developers on the site who don’t meet the 1,000-follower criterion.
When attempting to go live, users without public accounts and with less than 1,000 followers will get a new notification indicating that their account is no longer eligible for Live.
“We modified requirements to use this feature,” the message goes on. Live videos may only be made by public accounts with 1,000 followers or more.
Social media users have voiced their disapproval of the shift, with some calling for its reversal.
Since the short-form video app also needs users to have at least 1,000 followers in order to go live, the update puts Instagram’s live function more in line with TikTok’s.
By contrast, YouTube mandates that channels have at least 50 subscribers before they may launch.
The business said that the update is intended to enhance the overall Live consumption experience, although it did not specify why.
By restricting live streaming to those with a preexisting audience, the modification may restrict lower-quality broadcasts.
Additionally, it could allow Meta to save money. It’s possible that Meta has made the decision not to enable broadcasts with a small audience since it is costly to run live streaming.
OpenAI, valued at $300 billion value allegedly raises $8.3 billion.
According to The New York Times, OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, has raised $8.3 billion at a $300 billion value.
The agreement is a component of OpenAI’s larger plan to raise $40 billion this year.
According to the NYT, the oversubscribed round was months ahead of schedule.
When OpenAI revealed in March that it planned to raise $40 billion in a round led by Softbank, it first received $2.5 billion from venture capital companies.
As investors scramble to join its cap table amid stellar growth, the AI behemoth beat itself to the punch, having planned to take on an extra $7.5 billion by the end of the year.
According to The Information, OpenAI topped 700 million weekly active users of ChatGPT and achieved $12 billion in annualized revenue last week.
According to the Times today, the figure is more like $13 billion, and by the end of the year, it is expected to reach $20 billion.
The Trump administration’s AI Action Plan and discussions with Microsoft are further tailwinds that might assist the firm in achieving its objective of turning into a legitimate for-profit business.
An obscure investor, Dragoneer Investment Group, led the round with a shocking $2.8 billion check, according to The Times.
Mutual fund manager T. Rowe Price and private equity behemoths Blackstone and TPG were among the many new investors that took part in the round.
Founders Fund, Sequoia Capital, Tiger Global, Thrive Capital, Altimeter Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, Coatue Management, D1 Capital Partners, and Fidelity Management are among the other partners.
According to reports, several of OpenAI’s original investors were disappointed by the reduced stakes they received in the round, as the AI giant gave priority on acquiring new strategic backers.
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