Facebook sued by defunct photo app Phhhoto for allegedly copying its features

San Francisco: Defunct photo app Phhhoto is suing Meta, formerly Facebook, on antitrust grounds, claiming the social media platform feigned interest in working with it, but then copied its features and hid its name from search results, effectively driving it out of business.

Phhhoto's technology allowed users to capture five frames "in a single point-and-shoot burst," which could be looped into a short video (a phhhoto) to be shared either on its platform or Instagram. According to Phhhoto, Facebook copied Phhhoto's main feature and released it on its Instagram platform as Boomerang in 2015, after blocking Phhhoto from Instagram's API and from being pre-populated in Instagram posts. 

"The actions of Facebook and Instagram destroyed Phhhoto as a viable business and ruined the company's prospects for investment," Phhhoto said in a complaint filed in US District Court.

"Phhhoto failed as a direct result of Facebook's anticompetitive conduct. But for Facebook's conduct, Phhhoto was positioned to grow into a social networking giant, similar in size, scope, and shareholder value to other social networking and media companies with which Facebook did not interfere," it added.

A Meta spokesperson said that "this suit is without merit and we will defend ourselves vigorously".

Phhhoto was shut down in 2017 before reaching 3.7 million monthly active users at its peak.

"Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, former Instagram CEO Kevin Systrom, and several other Facebook employees downloaded the app in August 2014 and examined its features," the now-defunct photo app claimed in its lawsuit.

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