In a bid to build on its Augmented Reality (AR) ambitions, Facebook has acquired German computer vision startup Fayteq, which is known for its video-editing technology that makes it possible to add or remove objects from existing videos.
Facebook has confirmed the acquisition but did not share any additional information on its plans.
Read also:Facebook hands over its translation services to AI
Startup Fayteq:
- The social network major can use the technology for object tracking in live videos as part of its AR efforts and also for applying digital effects to captured videos.
- Fayteq had been selling plug-ins for video editors like ‘Adobe After Effects’.
- That allowed video-editors to track objects in videos and then add or remove objects with help of the tracking data.
- The company on Friday told its customers that its products and services are no longer available for purchase.
- Earlier this week, Facebook rolled out “Watch”.
- Watch, a video platform for creators and publishers which will be available to a limited group of people in the US on mobile, desktop, laptop and TV apps.
Read also:Facebook introduces ‘Watch’, a new video platform!
Facebook tries to enter China incognito:
- In a bid to explore the high-potential Chinese online market.
- Facebook has authorised the release of a new app here that does not carry its name.
- The app called “Colorful Balloons” is a photo-sharing app that shares the look, function and feel of Facebook’s Moments app.
- The app, which is designed to collate photos from a smartphone’s photo albums and then share them.
- It was released by a local company called Youge Internet Technology.
- In addition,which is registered to an address in eastern Beijing, without any hint of affiliation with Facebook.
- However, the room number listed in company registration documents could not be found amid a series of shabby, small offices on the building’s fourth floor.
- The director of the company, a woman named Zhang Jingmei, appeared in a photo of a meeting between Facebook and the Shanghai government.
- Sitting next to Facebook executive Wang-Li Moser, indicating she is likely associated with the company.
- Neither Facebook nor Jingmei has issued any official statement regarding their partnership.
- It is unclear whether China’s internet regulators were aware of the app’s existence.
- The under-the-table approach could cause Facebook new difficulties with Chinese government that has maintained strict oversight and control over foreign tech companies.
Read also:Facebook acquires Source3,a startup to fight Piracy!
Facebook was banned in China:
- Facebook was banned in China in 2009.
- Followed by its photo-sharing app Instagram in 2014 and its messaging app WhatsApp was partially blocked last month.
- Facebook’s founder Mark Zuckerberg has made a big point of meeting with Chinese politicians, studying Communist Party propaganda, Mandarin and even speaking it in public.
- China’s internet censorship has left big players.
- Like Facebook, Apple and Google out of the huge Chinese market with an audience of more than 700 million internet users.
- Last month, in a crackdown on Internet services by the government.
- Apple had removed all major VPN apps from the App Store in China.
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