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‘Snapchat’ denies ex-employee claim of CEO calling India poor

Snapchat, the image messaging mobile app is on fire after one of its creator and the CEO, Evan Spiegel is said to have demerited India in a meeting.

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DQC Bureau
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Snapchat, the image messaging mobile app is on fire after one of its creator and the CEO, Evan Spiegel is said to have demerited India in a meeting. The statement was said back in 2015. It came to light by Anthony Pompliano, a former employee of Snapchat. Recently Snapchat and Anthony Pompliano had some mismatch, and then Snapchat fired Mr. Pompliano. The angry ex-employee sued the company for malpractice and also gave out some of its secrets.

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According  to a US-based news website Snapchat`s ex-employee Anthony Pompliano as saying that  they were in a discussion about the growth of the app in 2015. Pompliano mentioned that the app could be expanded to more countries for better performance. While he was addressing, Evan Spiegel, the CEO of Snapchat interrupted him. He then said, “The app is only for rich people. I don’t want to expand into poor countries like India and Spain.”

But the company denied the remarks reports of which had resulted in the rating of the popular app dropping to a "single star" from an apparent "five star" on the App Store.

Denying the claims of Snapchat being termed as a `rich people`s app`, the attorneys termed Pompliano a "disgruntled employee fired for poor performance".

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Meanwhile, the rating of the popular app dropped to a "single star" from "five star" on the App Store.

According to the app info on App Store, the "Customer Ratings" of the current version of the app was "single star" (based on 6,099 ratings) and all versions` rating was "one and half star" (based on 9,527 ratings) as on Sunday morning.

The rating for the app on Android Play Store was "four star" (based on 11,932,996 ratings).

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Indians did not take the comment lightly and took to social media to lash out at the statement from the CEO. As the ratings of the app dropped, the criticism of the CEO and the app increased.

"First of all, I didn`t even want to give any freakin` star to this app. Evan (CEO of Snapchat) shows how stupid he is by saying this. I bet 3/4th of his company is run by Indian employees. If he didn`t want to expand it to poor countries, then why is this app free? Why didn`t he put any charges on it?" a user wrote on App Store, condemning the CEO.

Some users wrote, "Poor India & Spain need better than Snapchat", "Good bye, My Snapchat Account and Snap Inc. You`ll be product of gone by era and derision", and "Poor Evan Spiegel".

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The app was also trolled on Twitter. #boycottsnapchat became the most trending hashtag on Twitter overnight.

"I haven`t seen any Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians etc Tweets yet. Thanks @Snapchat for Uniting us," a user tweeted.

"I was addicted to @Snapchat but I love my country more than this app. Let`s see how you earn without Indians. @evanspiegel #boycottsnapchat," another user wrote on twitter.

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Some users even flagged the app for hateful content and left a message, "Dear @snapchatsupport, flagged you for hateful content. #boycottsnapchat".

According to a report in Forbes on Thursday, Facebook`s photo-sharing app Instagram surpassed Snapchat in daily active users of "Stories" feature, though the format was first launched by Snapchat in 2013.

Instagram`s "Stories" feature was now used by more than 200 million people every day -- an increase of 50 million since January.

On the other hand, Snapchat which launched the "Stories" format in October 2013, had 161 million daily active users in February.

"Stories" feature is an ephemeral chain of photo and video clips with filters and special effects. More recently, Facebook and WhatsApp also introduced the feature, imitating Snapchat.

ceo snapchat messaging-mobile-app creator evan-spiegel poor-india
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