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When Getting Lonely

Thing Come Up When Getting Lonely At Home , At Street , Every Where ....

 

Instagram Is About to Start Sharing Your Data With Facebook



The revised Instagram Privacy Policy and Terms of Service finally kick in on Saturday — and in case you missed it, the part where the service said it might sell your photos to advertisers has been redacted. You can relax on that front.
The only major change for users? Instagram is now allowed to start sharing their data with its parent company, Facebook.
"Our updated privacy policy helps Instagram function more easily as part of Facebook by being able to share info between the two groups," the company wrote on an unsigned blog post.
"This means we can do things like fight spam more effectively, detect system and reliability problems more quickly, and build better features for everyone by understanding how Instagram is used."
The changeover also means your Instagram pictures will be fully hosted on Facebook's servers for the first time. Previously, the pics were hosted on Amazon Web Services.
No doubt Instagram will lose a few users who aren't fans of Facebook. That may be offset by continuing growth, however.
The company also announced Thursday it has 90 million monthly active users as of January, which it said was a 10% increase over December.
Readers with sharp memories may recall Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg throwing out the figure of 100 million Instagram users back in September. However, that number referred to the service's registered users.
All Instagram user-figure announcements before that, such as the 80 million mentioned in July, also referred to registered users. Monthly active users is a more accurate reflection of the service's popularity.
Instagram won't say how many registered users it currently has, so we can't do an apples-to-apples comparison. However, if it's anything like other social services such as Twitter, the total of accounts is likely to be roughly double the monthly active number.
Will Instagram be hurt or helped by the fact that it is joining its data to Facebook's? Sound off in the comments.

 

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