- Today in Digital Marketing
- Posts
- BeReal Careful
BeReal Careful
Is the real-life photo app a little TOO real life? Reddit rolls out a big upgrade for media buyers... If TikTok's so good, why is it bleeding money?... And more!
Time to Tighten Your BeReal Policies?
It's the newest app that everyone's copying β but a new report suggests you might want to be a bit wary.
An interesting piece up on Digiday today looks at why the photo app BeReal poses very real security risks in the workplace.
π§ BeAware of Your Surroundings
The app's entire concept is to capture the real part of someone's life. It sends notifications at random times of the day to prompt users to capture their surroundings with front and rear cameras.
But some security experts are warning that if the notification appears while someone is at their work computer, it could lead to a privacy breach.
Their suggestion? Close the tabs on your computer first. It may seem obvious, but, if your employees are using BeReal at work, this may be a worthwhile discussion to have.
πͺ Opening the Door To Hackers
In the app, it's not uncommon to see images of people's computer screens during the work week, such as their inboxes or assignments they are working on. Of course, that can lead to bigger problems as it's basically opening a portal to hackers. One security expert believes that it's inevitable that scammers will take advantage of users if they find a weak spot.
The piece notes that while employers will have to hope that the majority of their employees who use the app are mindful, there are other ways to take action to prevent privacy breaches, such as:
Updating social media policies
Educating staff about security risks and phishing
So, BeReal, just not with your company's confidential info up on your monitor.
Image: BeReal
Reddit Updates to Ad Manager
Image: Reddit
Reddit is hoping to get a piece of your media budget this quarter β The platform rolled out new updates to its Ad Manager yesterday.
π¬ Live Chat
First, it's adding live chat to provide direct access to Reddit's support team for ad-related questions.
π Pixel Helper
Next, the platform will be rolling out a new Pixel Helper tool in the ads dashboard that provides guidance on how to integrate the Reddit Pixel to measure campaign performance.
π UI Updates
The platform has also made several updates to its Ads Manager user interface, including:
An Audience Manager tool that lets advertisers create, edit, delete, and reuse audiences across campaigns
A new Post Library which stores ad creative in one place
Advertisers can now update the creatives of an existing ad right on the βEdit Adβ page
A redesigned Estimates tool provides advertisers with impression and click estimates for their ad group, along with estimated audience reach
Finally, Reddit has expanded its targeting options by adding over 1000 new targetable communities.
TikTok's Parent is Bleeding Billions: Report
You win some, you lose... billions.
TikTok parent ByteDance Ltd.'s operating losses exceeded $7 billion last year as it spent heavily to maintain its rapid growth, according to a newly leaked financial report shared with employees.
β¬οΈ Revenue Up
The report also showed that an operating profit was also produced by ByteDance in the first quarter of this year, suggesting that one of the world's most valuable startups might be turning the corner after years of losses, The Wall Street Journal reports.
β¬οΈ Losses Also Up
However, the company is bleeding billions in cash due to astronomical spending, even with revenue up nearly 80% to over $60 billion last year. Among costs, ByteDance reportedly spent over $19 billion on "selling and marketing expenses" in 2021.
Other factors offsetting its rapid revenue growth, include:
Research and development spending
Market-value changes on a range of convertible securities
Giving us a grand total of $7 billion in the company's operating loss in 2021, more than tripling its loss in 2020 of $2 billion.
ByteDance declined to comment.
Goodbye, For Now, Scout
Amazon's belt-tightening continues β this time it's kicking its little blue delivery robot, Scout, to the curb.
Earlier this week, Bloomberg reported that the e-commerce giant was pumping the brakes on the program and the Scout team.
π Itβs Not Goodbye, Itβs I'll See You Later?
However, an Amazon spokesperson recently responded saying that the company isn't killing the robot altogether, but instead is scaling back. Thus, the home delivery robot will no longer be tested publicly.
The spokesperson added that through its tests, aspects of the program weren't meeting customers' needs.
Bloomberg noted that the company's decision to ditch testing Scout is part of a company-wide move to cut down on more speculative investments as growth in its core retail sector slows.
β‘ Lightning Round
META warned over 1 million Facebook users today that their accounts may have been compromised by third-party apps on the Apple and Google app stores. The company says it identified over 400 malicious apps disguised as games, photo editors, and other utilities that are designed to steal people's Facebook login info.
TWITTER: Earlier this week Twitter started rolling out the "Edit" button in select markets. As of yesterday, Twitter says it has started rolling out the edit button to its U.S.premium subscribers.
METAVERSE: The horizon isn't looking too bright right now for the Metaverse. According to leaked internal memos, Horizon Worlds, Meta's flagship "metaverse" app, is suffering from too many quality issues, so bad that even the team building it isn't using it much. The team says it will remain in a "quality lockdown" until the end of the year to "ensure that we fix our quality gaps and performance issues before we open Horizon to more users."
META: Finally, it's the end of Meta's advertising policies. They are no more! That's because they've been renamed to Meta Advertising Standards. What's changing? Nothing. Just the name.
Because THAT'S what advertisers have been asking Meta to spend its time doing, right?
Reply