Épisodes

  • Snap's Legal Woes, AR Wins, and a New Safety Feature Amid Mixed Headlines
    Sep 2 2025
    Snapchat BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    Snapchat just cannot stay out of the headlines these days. Major news broke this week as multiple outlets including PR Newswire report that Snap Inc. is now facing a class action securities lawsuit initiated by Levi and Korsinsky on behalf of investors. The complaint suggests that Snap’s leadership gave overly positive reports about the company’s prospects while hiding that advertising revenue growth plunged dramatically this spring—from a healthy nine percent in Q1 all the way down to just one percent in April. When the disappointing truth surfaced during Snap’s August 5th financial disclosure, their stock promptly nosedived by more than seventeen percent in a single day, going from $9.39 to $7.78 a share. Snap execs blamed the poor results on advertising platform issues, the timing of Ramadan, and a few minor changes, but investors were not satisfied and the deadline for new plaintiffs to join the suit is October 20th.

    Not all weighty news is legal drama though. Snapchat made a notable business appearance on ET Now’s “Leaders of Tomorrow” this week, where its APAC Head of Marketing Science, Amit Chaubey, unveiled a new marketing metric from their so-called Attention Advance Advantage Report. He explained that even a five percent uptick in user attention to ads on Snapchat leads to four percent better brand recall and a striking twelve percent jump in brand favorability for advertisers. It is an attempt to reposition Snapchat as a place where not just young people but also brands can get more for their ad dollar, and the company is banking that these new metrics will convince marketers to choose Snap for more impactful digital spend.

    In product news, the company just rolled out a new “Home Safe” feature—announced via Snap’s official newsroom—letting Snapchatters pressure-free notify a friend when they arrive home safely after a night out. This is being touted as part of their ongoing bid to “contribute to human progress” through the camera and keeps with their community-first vision. At the same time, Snap’s partnership with American Eagle is taking visual marketing to the next level with over 800 retail locations debuting as Promoted Places on Snap Map, making physical shopping more interactive via the app.

    Augmented reality is also in focus, with Snap bringing the ancient world literally to your smartphone through an AR collaboration with historian Bettany Hughes, not to mention the new culture-enhancing AR project teamed with the Palace of Versailles. Meanwhile, Snap boasts in its own press materials that over nine hundred million people use the app monthly, and more than three hundred fifty million interact with augmented reality features daily.

    On social media, the marketing push behind new campaigns, collaborations, and product innovation is showing up as trending topics, and Snap-issued stats are fueling tech analysts’ and financial commentators’ running debates over whether this is a comeback or more sizzle than steak. No significant executive scandals or departures have been reported, but financial and investor chatter remains dominated by the lawsuit fallout, with user excitement being driven by the latest AR and safety updates.

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    4 min
  • Snap's Ad Glitch Fiasco: Lawsuits, AI Bets, and Gen Z Gambles
    Aug 30 2025
    Snapchat BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    Snapchat is having one of its most dramatic weeks since its IPO buzz days and here’s the unvarnished scoop. On August 5 the company dropped its second quarter fiscal 2025 results, making headlines for all the wrong reasons. Snap revealed a major technical glitch in its ad auction system—think campaigns clearing at deep discount prices—and blamed the impact on a mix of Ramadan timing and minor platform changes. Wall Street was unimpressed. The first trading day after the earnings call saw Snap’s stock tumble 17 percent, closing at $7.78 according to multiple business wires and Yahoo Finance. That selloff wasn’t just a fleeting panic. As of today, Snap shares hover around $6.99, the lowest point in recent memory.

    The aftershocks: a major class action lawsuit is heating up, with investors urged by Glancy Prongay and Murray, Howard G. Smith, and Robbins LLP to join before the October 20 lead plaintiff deadline. Plaintiffs allege Snap misled the street about its ad business, painting a too-rosy picture of revenue potential while internal chaos reigned and competitors gobbled up ad budgets. The lawsuit centers on claims that Snap’s top brass overpromised and underdelivered, with many financial outlets speculating this litigation could reshape how AI-era platforms are held accountable for technical failures as much as corporate disclosure issues.

    Meanwhile, CEO Evan Spiegel tried to steady the ship by emphasizing future investments in AI and automation to revitalize their battered ad platform and improve average revenue per user. But analysts are openly debating the long-term cost of advertisers—especially budget-conscious ones—flocking toward Meta and TikTok, which are seen as more reliable. Boardroom intrigue is also boiling over Snap’s founder-friendly governance, with renewed calls for greater board diversity and transparency in light of recent performance and the spike in similar tech lawsuits.

    But in classic Silicon Valley style, Snap is hustling out fresh product innovation amid the turmoil. The company just unveiled a sweeping new app promotion suite branded the App Power Pack, designed to woo marketers with Sponsored Snaps, AI-powered cost-per-acquisition bidding, and playable app ads that can be sampled before download. TechEdt and eMarketer report this ad refresh is not just about smoothing over recent revenue misses; it’s also a high-stakes gambit to re-cement Snap as the go-to for reaching Gen Z, especially as chat-based ads showed a glimmer of hope in the otherwise rocky second quarter.

    No high-profile public appearances or viral CEO moments have distracted from the core narrative: investor skepticism, legal maneuvers, and a company sprinting to reinvent itself as its ad-centric model faces both technological and competitive headwinds. Social media buzz has orbited around the lawsuit and earnings dip, as #Snapchat trended briefly with memes about tech glitches and hot takes on founder power. This could mark an inflection point for the brand—or its latest bump on the road. For now, all eyes are on the courtroom, the next earnings cycle, and whether Snap’s bet on app-centric ad formats can reboot the magic.

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    4 min
  • Snap's Stormy Week: Lawsuits, AI Concerns, and Gen Z Wellbeing
    Aug 26 2025
    Snapchat BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    Snapchat has been at the center of several major headlines in just the past few days, and if I sound a little breathless, it’s because the news has been pouring in fast. To start, let’s talk about the Wall Street drama. On August 5th, Snap revealed in its Q2 2025 financial report that advertising revenue growth had sharply decelerated, something they blamed on a glitch in their ad platform, the timing of Ramadan, and a handful of technical changes. That honesty did little to assuage investors: Snap’s stock price tumbled over 17 percent the very next day, according to reporting from Yahoo Finance. Since then, at least three separate law firms, including Pomerantz LLP and Levi & Korsinsky, have rushed to announce class action suits against Snap and its leadership, accusing them of making materially misleading statements to investors over the past few months. If you bought Snap shares this year, all the legal alerts suggest you might want to check your inbox—investor loss lawsuits are heating up and deadline reminders are everywhere.

    Business-wise, Snap is experiencing a shift in its advertising mix that’s more evolutionary than revolutionary but significant for its future revenue. Data published by WARC shows Snap is doubling down on direct response advertising, which, unlike traditional brand ads, encourages users to click, buy, or sign up then and there. That segment grew a healthy 16 percent year over year in Q3, especially among small and medium-sized businesses, as large brand budgets in tech, entertainment, and retail tightened. Sponsored Snaps—Snap’s answer to easy ad placement—were highlighted by CEO Evan Spiegel as a step towards reaccelerating their brand ad revenue, so expect to see more seamless ads in your feed.

    Of course, I can’t ignore the elephant in the room: Snapchat’s aggressive push into generative AI and its attendant data controversy. According to a recent exposé by TACD, Snapchat quietly rolled out a new app setting allowing the company to train its AI models on users’ publicly shared photos, videos, and audio clips, with the default switched to “yes.” Observers call the move exploitative, echoing growing concerns that Snap’s design manipulates teens and young adults into oversharing public content while legal regulation lags years behind. Civic groups warn that new privacy complaints may be slow-walked as regulators play catch-up.

    On the safety front, Snap launched its first European Council for Digital Well-Being, inviting teens to share their online experiences, and expanded teen councils in Australia and Europe. The company published new research showing that 80 percent of Gen Z faced at least one online risk last year, but also that more young people are seeking help—Snap is making real efforts here. They also hosted their fourth US Law Enforcement Summit, doubling down on collaboration to combat child exploitation.

    And for those who move in marketing or social circles, Snap has recently been named a program partner for the Smarties Unplugged India 2025, flagged on Instagram. Meanwhile, inspiring case studies for brands span industries from retail to travel and pharma, suggesting Snapchat’s ecosystem for ads and AR engagement remains robust.

    In summary, the past week for Snapchat has been a cocktail of investor agitation, ad business transformation, regulatory questions over AI and user privacy, and new efforts to foster digital well-being. Every move Snapchat makes right now carries weight, whether in the form of lawsuits or in the algorithms shaping what millions of teens see and share daily.

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    4 min
  • Snapchat's Tumultuous Times: Lawsuits, AI Controversy, and a Fight for Ad Revenue
    Aug 26 2025
    Snapchat BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    Snapchat is feeling the heat after a turbulent few days that have seen headlines, lawsuits, and power moves at the highest levels. On August 5, Snap Inc. disappointed Wall Street with its Q2 2025 financials, revealing a sudden slowdown in advertising revenue growth, plummeting from 9 percent growth in Q1 to a paltry 1 percent by April. In response, big-name law firms Pomerantz LLP and Levi and Korsinsky have both filed class action lawsuits, alleging the company misled investors about its true revenue predicament. Snapchat’s share price tumbled over 17 percent in a single day, from $9.39 to $7.78—not exactly the energy you want heading into the fall, and prompting Bank of America to trim its price target yet again, from $10 to $9.50, while reiterating a ‘neutral’ rating.

    While investors were left reeling, Snapchat’s business team moved to shore up the ad business by doubling down on direct response advertising. According to WARC, direct response grew 16 percent as more small and mid-sized businesses flocked to affordable, measurable campaigns. The number of advertisers on snap doubled year-on-year in Q3 2024, and CEO Evan Spiegel insists that new ad formats, including sponsored Snaps, are designed to refuel the brand advertising segment that’s been losing steam.

    Behind the scenes, Snap is also making organizational power plays. Data Center Knowledge just revealed the company has poached Jerry Hunter, former global head of Amazon’s data centers, signaling a serious escalation in Snap’s AI and infrastructure ambitions. And on the AI front, Snap is once again attracting criticism from privacy activists and digital rights organizations. The Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood called out Snapchat for quietly introducing a setting that allows the company to use public user content—including images, video, audio, and text—for generative AI training, with the default set to opt-in and minimal notice to users. Critics argue that the design targets teens and young adults, exploiting peer pressure and FOMO to drive public sharing—the latest flashpoint in the techlash over exploitation of young users.

    On the safety beat, Snap’s own newsroom touted the expansion of its Council for Digital Well-Being into Europe and Australia, inviting teens to advise on digital life and online safety—a move that contrasts sharply with the lawsuits and regulatory scrutiny. Social media mentions have been split between investor drama and Snap’s partnership as a headlining sponsor for Smarties Unplugged India 2025, with Instagram lighting up with congratulations for the brand’s continued global presence. As summer turns, all eyes are on Snap’s next moves, the lawsuits, and whether its bets on AI and new ad formats can win back investor confidence—or just fuel the next controversy.

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    3 min
  • Snapchat's Roller Coaster: Soaring Growth, Glitches, and the Fight for Gen Alpha
    Aug 23 2025
    Snapchat BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    Snapchat has been making headlines throughout August 2025 with the sort of volatility, imagination, and controversy that would make any Silicon Valley soap drama jealous. The biggest news is Snap’s turbulent Q2 financials: the company reported 8.7 percent revenue growth to 1.34 billion dollars, and daily active users shot to a record 469 million, but a single catastrophic glitch in Snap’s ad auction system set off a 263 million dollar shortfall and triggered a jaw-dropping 17 percent stock plunge in one day. According to TrendPulse Finance, insiders cited external macroeconomic factors like US tariffs and Ramadan, but the Abdul Hameed lawsuit alleges Snap executives misled investors about the true cause—turns out this wasn’t just an unlucky quarter, but a fundamental failure in execution and governance as Snap’s dual-class share structure concentrated control in the hands of co-founders Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy, and left shareholders out in the cold.

    As if that weren’t enough, the aftermath saw the Rosen Law Firm swoop in to organize a class action on behalf of shareholders burned between April and August, shaking confidence in Snap’s leadership and putting even more pressure on the boardroom. Meanwhile, Snap’s transparency efforts draw a sharp contrast: a fresh transparency report for H1 2024 has just dropped, and Snap is shouting about its safety initiatives, like partnering with the Department of Homeland Security’s Know2Protect campaign and launching Digital Well-Being Councils in Europe and Australia to listen directly to teens. If you scan the official Snap news feed, there’s nearly as much about child exploitation prevention, law enforcement summits, and online risk research as there is about product innovation.

    But innovation is still very much on display. Snapchat’s ad business, despite recent woes, is evolving rapidly. New AI-powered Smart Campaign Solutions and Sponsored Snaps in chat are showing businesses up to 22 percent more conversions, and Snap’s relentless push into augmented reality continues with big claims for AR glasses, though, as eMarketer recently wrote, Snap may be seeking outside capital for Spectacles just to keep pace with Meta and TikTok. Ironically, while Gen Z remains obsessed with Snap, there’s angst internally that young Gen Alpha users are slipping through their fingers, making the success of AR and future-facing products absolutely existential.

    Social media itself has been alive with conversation—a viral Instagram reel highlighted Snapchat’s AR marketing prowess just as Snap influencers rally around the 145 percent year-over-year growth in the Snap Stars creator program. Still, underneath the engagement and energy there’s unmistakable vulnerability: with most revenue still tied to ads, any technical hiccup casts a long shadow, and Snap’s ability to navigate this storm will determine whether it remains the darling of youth culture or becomes a cautionary tale.

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    3 min
  • Snapchat's $550M Bet: AR Glasses, AI Engagement, and the Race for Digital Dominance
    Aug 9 2025
    Snapchat BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    This week, my every move has been scrutinized as Snapchat made headlines across the tech and business worlds. The big story was my Q2 earnings, reported August 5th, that revealed steady user growth—932 million monthly actives, up 7 percent—yet sparked concern over slowing advertising revenue. According to company filings, revenue did climb 9 percent to about $1.34 billion, but much of that was outside North America. The Wall Street and tech press zoomed in on the fact that US and European user numbers are flat or declining, which hits where my biggest advertisers still pay most, as reported by Social Media Today and Mediapost. Even so, my short-form video feature, Spotlight, is booming, commanding 40 percent of all content time with user engagement up 23 percent year over year, and with 550 million monthly users. My Snap Map has topped 400 million, and my video chat feature saw engagement up by a third over last year.

    Advertisers are noticing the changes—PYMNTS and PPC Land point to my expanded Sponsored Snaps, which now drive up to a 22 percent lift in conversions, with big click-to-convert and dwell time boosts. Still, despite these brighter spots, my revenue guidance for next quarter rattled Wall Street. My stock tanked nearly 20 percent in a day as investors questioned whether growth abroad could offset declining engagement and revenue at home, a downturn highlighted by StocksToTrade.

    Publicly, CEO Evan Spiegel acknowledged on my latest earnings call that global macroeconomic challenges and ad platform tweaks hit auction prices, squeezing my main cash flow. Financial outlets such as PYMNTS noted a renewed focus on automation, and I am loudly championing AI and AR to revive my fortunes. Spiegel reconfirmed that my much-anticipated Specs AR glasses are set to launch in 2026, with the ambition to beat Meta’s Orion to market. Pursuing this vision isn’t cheap—I posted a $263 million net loss for Q2, up from $249 million last year.

    Globally, my partnership with WPP Media and Lumen hit Indian headlines, with a major research initiative confirming that AR Lenses are twice as effective at capturing young people’s attention as other formats—a finding I am publicizing as proof that my signature tools are digital attention magnets.

    Finally, in business circles, I made waves with the announcement of a $550 million senior notes offering, expected to close this week, signaling to the market that I am both shoring up my financial base and betting big on the next phase of immersive, AI-driven engagement. Through it all, chatter about me on social media and tech sites is increasingly a mix of curiosity, concern, and anticipation—everyone wonders if my next bet on AR and AI will finally transform my narrative from comeback story to industry dominance.

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    4 min
  • Snapchat's AI Bet: Battling Losses, Glitches, and Rivals in Quest for Social Media Dominance
    Aug 6 2025
    Snapchat BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    Snapchat has been making headlines this week with its latest financial results and some major shifts in platform dynamics. I just revealed that I now serve a record 469 million daily active users, which is up nine percent from last year. My monthly active user base hit 932 million. But a closer look shows some turbulence beneath that growth. I lost 2 million daily users in North America, dropping from 100 million to 98 million, which raises a few eyebrows about my stateside appeal. The upside is that 36 million new daily active users came from the rest of the world, and outside my traditional strongholds, I am still surging forward.

    On the business front, my revenue for the last quarter hit 1.345 billion dollars, marking a nine percent year-over-year increase, according to my parent company’s recent earnings report. Despite this, I am also making headlines for my financial aches: my net loss deepened to 263 million dollars, up from 249 million this time last year, and this slower revenue growth is putting pressure on my long-term storyline. A technical glitch briefly let some ads run at rock-bottom prices, sending my stock plunging more than sixteen percent after hours, which did not escape notice by analysts at eMarketer and Reuters. They quickly compared my performance to rivals Meta, Google, and Reddit, who are all currently thriving.

    The talk in the industry is about my push to combine slick new AI features with my signature augmented reality, aiming to woo both users and advertisers. My CEO Evan Spiegel keeps hinting at how AI-driven ad tools, like my Smart Campaigns, are supercharging small and midsize business performance and driving better ad targeting. But he also admits that economic headwinds, shifting consumer tastes, and tariff troubles are making advertising dollars harder to come by. For context, ad revenue only grew by four percent this quarter—not quite enough for a triumphant headline among social media giants.

    That doesn’t mean it’s all gloom. I’m proud that 550 million people now use my TikTok-style Spotlight feature every month, making up more than forty percent of total time spent on my platform and reflecting a massive jump in video engagement. Augmented reality lenses remain hugely popular, hit eight billion uses a day, and over 350 million users play with AR daily. But investors and the public are watching closely—many are wondering if innovations in AI and increased global growth will be enough to power me through a fiercely competitive social media landscape. As I chase my ambitious goals, every glitch and every viral trend now makes headlines, so every move matters.

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    3 min
  • How Snapchat Revolutionized Social Media by Embracing Authenticity Ephemeral Messaging and User Creativity
    Aug 6 2025
    # From Vanishing Photos to Digital Giant: The Snapchat Revolution

    Discover the fascinating journey of Snapchat from a simple college idea to a global social media phenomenon in this captivating podcast episode. Learn how a casual conversation between Stanford students about disappearing photos transformed into one of the most innovative platforms of the digital age.

    This episode explores how Snapchat's founders—Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy—disrupted social media by embracing ephemerality in a world obsessed with digital permanence. Follow their path from the app's humble beginnings as "Picaboo" to its meteoric rise as it introduced game-changing features like Stories, which were later adopted across the social media landscape.

    Dive into Snapchat's core mission of authentic connection, learn why the founders rejected billion-dollar acquisition offers, and understand how their commitment to privacy, creativity, and augmented reality continues to shape digital communication today. Whether you're a social media enthusiast, entrepreneur, or tech follower, this episode offers valuable insights into one of the most transformative brands reshaping how we connect in the digital age.

    #SocialMedia #SnapchatStory #DigitalInnovation #TechStartups #AugmentedReality

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    For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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    7 min