If you have not used TikTok, you are rapidly becoming the global
exception, writes Drew Harwell in the Washington Post*. In five years, the app, once written off as a silly
dance-video fad, has become one of the most prominent and technically sophisticated juggernauts on the internet - a phenomenon that has secured an unrivaled
grasp on culture and everyday life. TikTok’s website was visited last year more often than Google and its ad revenue is estimated to have tripled this year, to $12 billion. TikTok is a social media app that allows users to create short videos of
their own up to 3 minutes long. It's different from other social media
platforms because while Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram are primarily
focused on sharing images and text, TikTok is all about sharing videos. But more than that. Tiktok has blown up the model of what a social
network can be. Silicon Valley taught the world a style of online
connectivity built on hand-chosen interests and friendships. TikTok
doesn’t care about those. Instead, it unravels for viewers an endless
line of videos selected by its algorithm, then learns a viewer’s tastes
with every second they watch, pause or scroll. You don’t tell TikTok
what you want to see. It tells you: “We’re talking about a platform that’s shaping how a whole generation is learning to perceive the world.”. TikTokers are increasingly using the app as a visual search tool too. Thanks to its gravitational pull on creators and audiences, the app’s videos now encompass practically every topic on earth. TikTok, then, is an app that stimulate creativity. In other words, TikTok can be seen as another ideation tool for generating and communicating ideas. *Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/interactive/2022/tiktok-popularity/?utm_source=pocket-newtab-global-en-GB
Friday, October 28, 2022
TikTok for ideation
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