It’s been a while
since we heard from Snow, the Snapchat clone app in Asia that Facebook once
tried to buy, but today the company behind it has scooped up a $50 million
investment from SoftBank and Sequoia China .
Snow was started by
Naver, the Korean firm behind popular messaging app Line, and it had proven
popular in Japan , Korea , China
and other markets in Asia thanks to a focus onlocalized filters, stickers and features. Not to mention Snapchat’s famous lack
of effort in Asian markets.
The Snow app has
changed significantly since we last wrote about it, however. It’s no longer a
Snap clone.
A major updated that
dropped last week removed Snow’s user-to-user communication features and turned
it into a dedicated selfie camera app. Without chat, the app doubles down
on filters, stickers, augmented reality (AR), and other selfie-related features
to make photos and other media that can be exported to social networks or chat
groups.
Snow users can now,
for example, record a video set to music from artists that include Charlie
Puth. There’s the usual array of photo filters, alongside a GIF maker and
Instagram-like Boomerang feature.
Snow plans to use this
new investment to develop its augmented reality and facial recognitiontechnologies. Its App Store listing shows it is working with Chinese unicorn
SenseTime on facial recognition.
It is also aiming
to build partnerships and localize its service in China . Outside
of Snow, Snow Corp also owns camera apps Foodie and B612, which it
acquired from Line, so they may also be pushed in China as standalone apps, although
the tech behind them is also shared with the core Snow app.
A Snow representative
told TechCrunch that the app now has over 200 million downloads on iOS and
Android. The company doesn’t break out specific data for each market, but it
said that China
is its largest market. In January 2017, we reported that Snow had 40-50 millionmonthly active users but there’s no further update on the MAU front for
now.
SoftBank — and this is
SoftBank Group not the Vision Fund — and Sequoia have bought up 20 percent of
the shares of Snow’s Chinabusiness unit via this deal. Line is among Snow’s other backers, via two
investments.
No comments:
Post a Comment