General

YouTube Works on TikTok Rival Titled “Shorts”

NewsGram Desk

Google-owned YouTube is reportedly working on a TikTok rival called Shorts, to be introduced by the end of this year.

Shorts will allow people to upload brief videos into a feed inside the mobile app, much like TikTok, and take advantage of licensed music that YouTube Music has in its catalog, reports The Information.

The Shorts feature will make use of all the music that YouTube has licensed already, with songs to be available to use as soundtracks for the videos created by users, according to the report.

Please Follow NewsGram on Twitter To Get Latest Updates From Around The World!

After the success of TikTok, there has been a race to launch short-video apps. Dom Hofmann, co-founder of the now defunct six-second video platform Vine, has also announced the release of its successor called Byte.

Google-owned YouTube is reportedly working on a TikTok rival called Shorts, to be introduced by the end of this year. Pixabay

Byte has an uncanny resemblance with almost everything that made Vine unique. To take on TikTok's growing popularity, Facebook-owned Instagram has launched a new video-music remix feature called "Reels".

"Reels" will let users make 15-second video clips set to music and share them as Stories. In November last year, Facebook quietly released a stand-alone app called "Lasso" to compete with TikTok.

Google has also launched short-form video app Tangi which is focued on creativity and Do It Yourself (DIY) space. The app is a product from Google's in-house incubator titled Area 120. (IANS)

With Oli out, New Delhi pushes fast for rapprochement in Kathmandu to counter security risks

Pakistan’s surveillance of its citizens not security but tyranny: Report

10 kg charas seized in J&K's Anantnag, three arrested

Modi-Shah May Take Credit for "Reviving" BJP, but It Was Pramod Mahajan Who "Digitized" It, Fruits of Which the Party Is Still Bearing—A Look Into Pramod Mahajan's Legacy

Lower inflation, reduced interest rates to extend broader support to India's domestic demand