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Monday, April 17, 2017

Snapchat App Ratings Seen to Drop to a Single Star on the App Store - NDTV


Snapchat has it bad. Not only is a much bigger company (Facebook) with a larger number of users copying most of its features, now, reports of alleged controversial statements by CEO Evan Spiegel have resulted in an apparent boycotting of the social app. A fallout of this has been a spate of negative ratings left on the App Store by outraged users. As of Sunday morning, Customer Ratings of Snapchat on the App Store for the current version of the app was a single star.

The single star rating for the current version of Snapchat on the App Store is based on 6,099 ratings, while the rating for all versions of the app is 1.5 stars, based on 9,527 ratings. As opposed to this, the rating for the app on the Google Play store was 4 star, based on 11,932,996 ratings.

Snapchat app ratings saw a drop after a report by the Variety cited a former employee to claim Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel had little interest in expansion overseas, and allegedly said "This app [Snapchat] is only for rich people," adding that he didn't want to "expand into poor countries like India and Spain." Snapchat has since denied the statement was made.

Indians did not take the comment lightly and took to social media to lash out at the alleged statement from the CEO. Ratings for Snapchat on the Apple App Store were seen to have faced a dramatic downturn, and Snapdeal was separately caught in the cross-fire due to the similarities in name.

"First of all, I didn't even want to give any freakin' star to this app. Evan (CEO of Snapchat) shows how stupid he is by saying this. I bet 3/4th of his company is run by Indian employees. If he didn't want to expand it to poor countries, then why is this app free? Why didn't he put any charges on it?" a user wrote on App Store, condemning the CEO.

Some users wrote, "Poor India & Spain need better than Snapchat", "Good bye, My Snapchat Account and Snap Inc. You'll be product of gone by era and derision", and "Poor Evan Spiegel".

The app was also trolled on Twitter. #boycottsnapchat became the most trending hashtag on Twitter overnight.

"I haven't seen any Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians etc Tweets yet. Thanks @Snapchat for Uniting us," a user tweeted.

"I was addicted to @Snapchat but I love my country more than this app. Let's see how you earn without Indians. @evanspiegel #boycottsnapchat," another user wrote on twitter.

Some users even flagged the app for hateful content and left a message, "Dear @snapchatsupport, flagged you for hateful content. #boycottsnapchat".

La st week, Facebook's photo-sharing app Instagram surpassed Snapchat in daily active users of "Stories" feature, though the format was first launched by Snapchat in 2013.

Instagram's "Stories" feature was now used by more than 200 million people every day - an increase of 50 million since January.

On the other hand, Snapchat who launched the "Stories" format in October 2013, had 161 million daily active users in February.

"Stories" feature is an ephemeral chain of photo and video clips with filters and special effects. More recently, Facebook and WhatsApp also introduced the feature, imitating Snapchat.

Snapchat has more than four million users in India.

Written with inputs from IANS< /p>



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