Los Angeles Times

TikTok is facing a new threat

Instagram’s Reels, a copycat video feature, aims to challenge the popularity of the Chinese-owned app.

- Bloomberg

Facebook Inc.’s Instagram photo-sharing app is launching its clone of TikTok in more than 50 countries, a week after Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg defended the company’s copycat strategies to U.S. lawmakers at an antitrust hearing.

The product, called Reels, lets people edit 15-second video clips alongside music, just like on TikTok. It will be embedded into Instagram in the U.S. and elsewhere, the company said Wednesday in a blog post.

Reels is the second major Instagram feature that follows an almost identical one popularize­d by a competitor. Instagram Stories, the tool for posting videos and photos that disappear, was inspired by Snap Inc.

Reels isn’t Facebook’s first attempt at challengin­g TikTok. Facebook’s Lasso, a separate applicatio­n with similar features that was tested in limited markets, was shut down last month after it failed to win over an audience. Reels may have better luck: It’s launching just as TikTok’s existence in the U.S. is being challenged by President Trump.

TikTok, owned by Chinabased ByteDance Ltd., faces either a ban in the U.S. or a potential spinoff and sale to a U.S. company, possibly Microsoft Corp. Trump and other officials say TikTok is a threat to national security because the Chinese government may have access to Americans’ data. TikTok has repeatedly denied the allegation­s.

“The timing happens to be coincident­al in some ways,” Vishal Shah, the head of product at Instagram, said in an interview with reporters. Facebook has already released Reels in other countries — including India, after TikTok was banned there. “We had the sense that the product had a lot of potential, and we learned really quickly that that was resonating with people,” Shah said.

The pressure from Trump has prompted some TikTok creators to redirect their audiences to Instagram, hoping for a more stable future in case TikTok is banned. Facebook benefits from the uncertaint­y even as regulators investigat­e the company for possible violations of antitrust law — particular­ly its practice of buying and copying rivals.

Documents released by Congress show that Zuckerberg in 2012 became more interested in the practice after observing Chinese competitor­s move quickly to introduce new products with already-proven uses.

Reels videos will show up in the Instagram Explore tab, where people can see content from accounts they aren’t already following.

The benefit of building Reels within Instagram, Shah said, is the existing network of more than 1 billion users. It’s more difficult to get people to download a new app than use one they already own, he said.

Reels will also give Instagram users a new opportunit­y to get famous, beyond the following they already have.

“We have not historical­ly been very good at helping new creators find an audience,” Shah said.

ByteDance has said Facebook’s copying, as well as its claims that Chineseown­ed apps may not be as committed to security or free speech, amount to “plagiarism and defamation.”

But Bytedance also didn’t invent the short edited video format. It was popularize­d by Vine, the app owned by Twitter Inc. that was shut down before TikTok’s rise.

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