Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Facebook gets silly with animated profile videos from Vine, Boomerang, and more

Add as a preferred source on Google

Facebook’s F8 Developer Conference kicked off in San Francisco today. As predicted, a lot of the focus centered on Messenger, Live Video, and VR.

Beyond chat bots and live-streaming, however, the social network revealed a huge update for user profiles. Facebook today announced that it has partnered with several third-party video apps to allow people to customize their profiles with videos and creative animations.

Recommended Videos

The new ‘Profile Expression Kit’ rolls out today with support for six iOS apps, among them the popular video-looping service Vine (owned by Facebook competitor Twitter), Boomerang by Instagram, Lollicam, BeautyPlus, Cinemagraph Pro, and MSQRD. The latter is a Snapchat-style video app that was acquired by Facebook earlier this year.

Facebook claims that its Profile Expression Kit will let you jazz up your profile in just a few taps, allowing you to bring a sense of humor, personality, and originality to the platform. Those are all important themes for the site, which has seen a worrying decline in the amount of personal posts on its service.

Most social media-savvy users will already be aware of the likes of Vine and Boomerang, but what about the other third-party video apps? Facebook reportedly selected its partners based on their popularity in various regions of the world. The likes of BeautyPlus and Lollicam (both selfie-centric apps with editing and animation features), for example, are currently trending in Asia, reports Forbes.

Profile videos generated through the selected apps can be either temporary or permanent, with Facebook allowing the ability to place a timer on a new creation. Additionally, users will be able to select a thumbnail of their videos to appear on integrated apps, such as Tinder and Spotify, where videos don’t autoplay. Facebook states that the feature will be available on the Android versions of the partner apps in the coming weeks. The social network is also opening up the Profile Expression Kit to developers, in order to integrate more apps.

Saqib Shah
Saqib Shah is a Twitter addict and film fan with an obsessive interest in pop culture trends. In his spare time he can be…
After YouTube, TikTok is testing its own AI likeness detection tool
TikTok's new tool lets creators flag AI deepfakes of themselves directly.
Home page of TikTok on Web.

AI deepfakes have become a headache for creators, and TikTok is finally stepping up to fight back. Social media consultant Matt Navarra spotted the platform quietly testing a new opt-in tool that hunts down AI-generated content mimicking a creator's face, giving them the power to flag it directly.

https://twitter.com/MattNavarra/status/2078129989128450064

Read more
You can now generate songs in your iMessage chats
iMessage users can now turn chats into short AI-generated songs
Text, Business Card, Paper

Suno has added an iMessage extension to its iOS app, letting users generate 30-second songs from voice recordings or typed prompts inside a Messages conversation.

The feature is available in the latest version of the Suno app and requires both people in the chat to have it installed. Users can access Suno from the plus menu in Messages, create a track, and share it without opening the standalone app.

Read more
The UK just proposed a midnight social media curfew for teens that they can bypass in seconds
The government wants 16- and 17-year-olds off apps like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube from midnight to 6 AM, but the restriction has a built-in workaround.
Girl using a black phone while lying down

The UK just proposed a midnight social media curfew for teenagers, but it comes with a built-in escape hatch. According to the BBC, the UK government plans to restrict social media access for 16- and 17-year-olds between midnight and 6 AM, preventing them from using apps like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. But getting around it will take nothing more than a few taps.

A curfew teens can switch off

Read more