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Twitter makes it easier to grab onto hot 'Moments'
By Glenn CHAPMAN
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 6, 2015


Google targets investment Symphony secure messaging
Paris (AFP) Oct 6, 2015 - Google is set to invest in secure messaging start up Symphony, primarily used by major financial entities and valued at $650 million, the Wall Street Journal said Tuesday.

Symphony uses encryption technology, allowing firms to communicate securely on a centralised platform.

Neither Google nor Symphony commented on the report.

Symphony launched globally last month as a rival to more expensive terminals from financial information provider Bloomberg, whose services are widely used by finance professionals and investors, who typically pay several thousand dollars a year for the service.

Symphony charges businesses with more than 50 users $15 per user per month.

Bringing Google into its capital mix alongside the likes of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and investment fund BlackRock, who already back the service, would provide Symphony with the Mountain View-based behemoth's technological savvy.

Earlier this year the start-up attracted the attention of New York's top banking regulator notably over its ability to retain documentation, open source features and its encryption and deletion facilities.

The Department of Financial Services (DFS) last month reached an accord with four banks, including Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse, obliging Symphony to retain copies of all electronic communications sent to or received from them for seven years.

Twitter made it easier Tuesday to seize hot tweets and high-profile posts from the flood of real-time commentary at the one-to-many messaging service.

A new "Moments" feature that promised to let people quickly tune into "the best of Twitter" made its debut in the United States with a promise it would spread wider in the coming months.

Hundreds of millions of tweets are fired off daily on Twitter, among them comments from world leaders, celebrities and people in the midst of dramatic events, according to product manager Madhu Muthukumar.

"We know finding these only-on-Twitter moments can be a challenge, especially if you haven't followed certain accounts," Muthukumar said in a blog post.

"But it doesn't have to be. Moments helps you find the best of Twitter as easily as tapping an icon."

A new lightning bolt icon at Twitter takes people to lists of "moments" that promise to stand out from the maelstrom of tweets, according to Muthukumar.

Stories in the Moments list are updated throughout the day, and the feature also lets people swipe through topics such as "Entertainment" and "Sports" to find relevant tweets from previous days.

At launch, most of the offerings at Moments were selected by a Twitter curation team, but there were also contributions from partners including Getty Images, Fox News, NASA and The Washington Post.

Twitter plans to expand the list of partners.

"We look forward to seeing new and exciting uses of Moments from more partners soon," Muthukumar said.

The Moments feature was added to Twitter applications for smartphones powered by Apple or Android software and to Twitter's website accessible from desktop computers.

- Evolving to thrive -

Twitter is intent on implementing ways for people, especially those new to the service, to quickly and easily find riveting tweets that will keep them using the service.

Launch of the new feature came just a day after co-founder Jack Dorsey returned for a second stint as permanent chief executive at the San Francisco-based social network.

Dorsey, who had been interim CEO since June, will run Twitter while remaining chief executive of Square, the digital payments firm he founded.

Twitter quickly become a global sensation after its launch in 2006, but the social media platform's growth has slowed and it has yet to turn a profit.

Its board is likely hoping Dorsey's return will have the same winning effect on Twitter as the return of another Silicon Valley wunderkind, Steve Jobs, did for a once floundering Apple.

"Our work forward is to make Twitter easy to understand by anyone in the world, and give more utility to the people who love to use it daily!" Dorsey tweeted Monday.

Forrester analyst Nate Elliott maintained that Facebook has grown apace by offering new features and experiences at the social network, while Twitter has stagnated, looking pretty much the same as it did when it first launched a decade ago.

"It's time for Twitter to build and innovate," Elliott said.

"Not every new idea launched will succeed -- but if it launches enough new features, some will surely find a wider audience. And a wider audience is exactly what Twitter needs."


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