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Tag: Push

  • ByteDance’s Lemon8 gains traction amid TikTok ban threat as creators push the app

    ByteDance’s Lemon8 gains traction amid TikTok ban threat as creators push the app

    Hearing a lot about Lemon8 lately? You’re not the only one.

    Amid a looming U.S. ban on TikTok, content creators have been pushing the platform’s sister app. Lemon8 resembles an amalgamation of the types of short-form videos found on TikTok and the picture-perfect aesthetic of Instagram and Pinterest.

    Like its popular relation, Lemon8 is owned by China-based ByteDance, whose collection of internationally available apps also includes the video editing app CapCut and the photo and art editing app Hypic. In addition, the company operates Douyin, the Chinese sibling of TikTok that follows Beijing’s strict censorship rules.

    Lemon8 launched in the U.S. in 2023, a few years after it first popped up in Asian markets. Though it garnered some media and user interest in its early days, the app hasn’t taken off as much as TikTok, which has more than 170 million U.S. users.

    But more people have downloaded the app in the past month, making it one of the top-ranking free apps on Apple’s app store. Lemon8’s popularity could potentially soar further depending on the outcome of a U.S. Supreme Court hearing Friday over a law requiring TikTok to break ties with ByteDance or face a U.S. ban.

    TikTok says it plans to shut down the platform in the U.S. by Jan. 19 if the government prevails, as it did in a lower court.

    Influencers previously partnered with Lemon8 to promote the lesser-known app on TikTok. In recent weeks, many of them have hailed Lemon8 as the place to go if TikTok is banned under federal law. Some have also been recommending it through paid sponsored posts tagged #lemon8partner, showing a recent corporate push to generate more users.

    But there’s a hitch. The law, which would wipe out TikTok’s U.S. operation if it’s not sold to an approved buyer, states the divest-or-ban requirement applies generally to apps that are owned or operated by ByteDance, TikTok or any of their subsidiaries. That means even though Lemon8 and CapCut are not explicitly named in the statute, their futures in the U.S. also are in jeopardy.

    Jasmine Enberg, an analyst at market research company Emarketer, noted that the creators recommending Lemon8 may not be aware of the possible implications for the other ByteDance apps because the law does not identify them.

    The recent Lemon8 ads on TikTok also may be a sign that ByteDance is “hoping or betting” Lemon8 slips through the cracks as lawmakers and regulators focus their attention on TikTok, Enberg said. Representatives for the companies did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    To boost Lemon8’s user base, TikTok announced in November that creators would be able to access a Lemon8 account with the same account they use on TikTok, a feature the company says will enhance their ability to cross-post content. TikTok said the integration was designed to expand creators “reach and engagement potential.”

    Like TikTok, Lemon8’s main feed features both a “following” section that lets users look at content from the creators they follow and a “For You” section that recommends other posts. The newer platform also sorts posts into different categories, like relationships, wellness and skincare.

    ByteDance has not disclosed the number of global or U.S. users on Lemon8, which is believed to be miniscule compared to its trend-setting sister app. Data from the research firm SimilarWeb indicates Lemon8 has a little over 1 million daily active users.

    Market intelligence company Sensor Tower estimates the app saw a significant jump in global downloads in December — a 150% increase — compared to an average 2% month-over-month decline last year. The U.S. accounted for 70% of the month’s downloads.

    The largest number of U.S. downloads were performed on Dec. 19, according to Sensor Tower. That was the day after the Supreme Court said it would hear this week’s oral arguments over the constitutionality of the federal law that could ban TikTok.

    The law passed with bipartisan support last year after lawmakers and Biden administration officials expressed concerns that Chinese authorities could force ByteDance to hand over U.S. user data or sway public opinion towards Beijing’s interests by manipulating the algorithm that populates users’ feeds.

    President-elect Donald Trump asked the Supreme Court on Dec. 27 to pause the potential TikTok ban from going into effect until he is inaugurated and his administration can pursue a “political resolution” to the issue.

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  • Baldwin County property owners push for landmark status to preserve rural lifestyle

    Baldwin County property owners push for landmark status to preserve rural lifestyle

    STAPLETON, Ala. — Residents of rural south Alabama are campaigning for a local amendment to gain landmark district status.

    Local amendments one, two and three in Baldwin County will define landmarks across Stapleton, Bon Secour and Whitehouse Fork — preserving residents’ rights to decide whether their land is incorporated into the surrounding city limits.

    WEAR News visited multiple farms in Stapleton where property owners are working hard to encourage Baldwin County residents to vote yes on these amendments. Residents say they’ve fought for more than two years to add the amendment to their ballot.

    A proposed constitutional amendment will prohibit the annexation of any property without property owners’ approval.

    Michele White lives on several acres in Stapleton. She and others living nearby have worked for several years to prevent annexation, telling WEAR News she and her neighbors don’t want to be forced into a different lifestyle.

    “It really became a mission because all of us who live in Stapleton moved out there on purpose,” said White. “We didn’t get thrown out to the country. We moved out there to lead a rural life in Baldwin County, and the area to do that is getting smaller and smaller and we want to preserve that in Stapleton.”

    Along with Stapleton, Bon Secour and Whitehouse Fork are also being voted on. White says voting no on the amendment would be a disservice to property owners.

    “Those are three small rural communities,” said White. “Granting landmark district status to us gives us identity to the map, but also protects us from neighboring annexing from nearby cities.”

    “This landmark district status doesn’t change zoning, doesn’t change land use, taxation,” she said. “[It] doesn’t affect anything that hurts anyone else — yet gives the property owners the ability to choose whether they want to stay in the county, if a nearby city wanted to annex their property.”

    Despite many landowners in the area against annexation, White says voting yes on the amendment doesn’t mean your property can’t be annexed. The amendment just secures your right to have the final say.

    “It still preserves the right for those landowners from accepting an invitation to be annexed,” White said. “It prevents them from being forced into annexation.”

    “We’re watching the cities get closer and closer on all sides,” she said. “I live in Stapleton and our area is bordered by Loxley, Spanish Fort and Bay Minette. And the growth is wonderful. We appreciate the municipalities and everything they do, but we’d like to see preservation of rural areas in Baldwin County.”

    Stapleton residents are holding a town hall on Thursday to discuss the specifics of the amendments. It’ll be on Baldwin County residents’ ballots a week from Tuesday.

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  • David Norman Jr. helps Vancouver FC push for its first post-season berth

    David Norman Jr. helps Vancouver FC push for its first post-season berth

    David Norman Jr. was born in New Westminster but grew up in Coquitlam.

    After a long and winding road, Coquitlam soccer player David Norman Jr. hopes he’s finally found a home close to home.

    In the eight years since Norman left Oregon State University after his freshman year to turn pro with the Vancouver Whitecaps development team, he’s alighted in Scotland, Victoria, Miami, Calgary, England and Ireland.

    In January, Norman signed a two-year contract with Vancouver FC of the Canadian Premier League, hopeful his itinerant voyage through the sport are over and the things he’s learned along the way will benefit his younger teammates..

    “It’s been quite the journey,” said Norman, who was born in New Westminster. “Playing under so many different coaches and systems, and for so many fan bases, I’m able to take all that experience and bring it to the club here.”

    Here is Langley, where Vancouver FC plays its home matches at Willoughby Park and Norman now lives.

    He said the proximity to Coquitlam, where friends and family are able to make the short journey to watch him play instead of checking results from faraway leagues and distant time zones, was a big driver of his decision to join the club.

    As well, the two seasons he spent with another CPL club, Calgary FC, showed him the strides the league has made in playing competitive soccer and developing the next generation of Canadian players.

    Norman, 26, said it’s important he become a part of that developmental arc by sharing his experiences with Vancouver FC’s younger Canadian players.

    “It’s special to think that 15 years ago the Whitecaps academy program was the only real opportunity for them and now there’s so many more opportunities to pursue their goals and dreams right here in BC,” Norman said.

    “I’ve seen what football is like elsewhere and if there’s any way I can help these young players, I want to be able to provide a bit of leadership.”

    Passing down his passion for the sport comes naturally for Norman. HIs grandfather founded Coquitlam Metro-Ford Soccer Club and his dad — also David — played professionally for the Vancouver Whitecaps in the old North American Soccer League as well as teams in the Major Indoor Soccer and the Canadian Soccer leagues. He also made 55 appearances with Canada’s national team.

    “Hearing their stories about the sport really helped me a young player,” said Norman, a defender.

    Despite his fulsome resumé, Norman has had to earn his way into Vancouver FC’s lineup, perhaps an indication of the quality of some of the team’s other young Canadian players, like Port Moody’s Anthony White and Port Coquitlam’s Kadin Chung.

    Norman has appeared in 15 of Vancouver FC’s 26 matches so far this season, scoring once. But he’s been a starter the past two and was named to the CPL’s Team of the Week for his defensive prowess in a 1-1 draw against Halifax Wanderers FC, Oct. 5. 

    That draw kept second-year Vancouver FC in the thick of a four-way battle for the final playoff spot heading into its last home match Sunday, Oct. 13, at 2 p.m., against Valour FC and a season-ending showdown with Atlético Ottawa on Oct. 19.

    Norman said the effort to get Vancouver FC into the post-season in just its second year of existence has been exciting.

    “It’s been a goal for the whole group since Day One,” he said. “For most teams it’s tough to come in and be successful right away.”


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  • Push to map Great Lakes bottom gains momentum amid promises effort will help fishing and shipping

    Push to map Great Lakes bottom gains momentum amid promises effort will help fishing and shipping

    MADISON, Wis. — Jennifer Boehme grew up scouting beaches around her home in St. Petersburg, Florida, for whatever she could find. Rocks, sand dollars, coquina mollusks — anything the ocean gave up.

    Now, 40 years later, Boehme wants to launch another treasure hunt. As executive director of the Great Lakes Observing System, she’s leading a campaign to map every meter of the lakes’ bottom. The effort, the marine scientist says, will pinpoint hundreds of underwater shipwrecks, illuminate topographical features and locate infrastructure. The map, she says, also will help ships avoid submerged hazards, identify fisheries and inform erosion, storm surge and flooding models as climate change intensifies.

    “One of the things that keeps me going is the idea of the discovery aspect of it,” Boehme said. “There’s a lot we don’t know about the lakes. We know more about the surface of the moon.”

    Only a fraction of the Great Lakes’ bottom has been mapped, and those low-resolution charts were completed decades ago, according to the Great Lakes Observing System, a non-profit that manages data from a network of lake observers and makes it easily accessible. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration certified the Great Lakes Observing System in 2016 as meeting federal standards for data gathering and management, allowing the federal government to use its data without further vetting.

    The organization has been pushing since 2018 to create high-resolution maps of all five Great Lakes bottoms, but that’s a daunting task. The lakes cover 94,250 square miles (244,106 square kilometers) — an area larger than the state of Kansas. Depths range from 210 feet (64 meters) in Lake Erie to more than 1,300 feet (396 meters) in parts of Lake Superior.

    The idea is gaining traction since technology has improved and scientists have completed high-resolution mapping of Florida coastlines and the Gulf of Mexico over the last three years. Two congressional representatives from Michigan — Republican Lisa McClain and Democrat Debbie Dingell — introduced a bill this year that would allocate $200 million to map the Great Lakes bottoms by 2030.

    “I believe it’s time to take exploration and discovery of the Great Lakes into our own hands,” McClain said during a House subcommittee hearing in March.

    The last effort to map the lakes came in the 1970s. Maps were largely created using single-beam sonar technology similar to today’s commercially available depth- and fish-finders. The system produced maps covering only about 15% of mostly coastal lake bottom, said Tim Kearns, a spokesperson for the Great Lakes Observing System. With a single sounding every 500 meters (547 yards), the maps were extremely low-resolution and could have missed sink holes, canyons, sand dunes, shipwrecks and infrastructure such as pipelines, cables and intake pipes, Kearns said.

    Fast forward nearly a half century. Now scientists and engineers have an array of new mapping tools.

    One is multibeam sonar. Rather than sending a single sound wave, these systems bounce potentially hundreds off the bottom. The technology is so sensitive it can detect air bubbles in the water, according to NOAA.

    The only drawback is that systems need to be mounted on submersibles or towed under ships to obtain high-resolution images in deep water.

    Another tool is laser imaging, where scientists measure how long it takes for a laser beam fired from a plane to reach an object and bounce back, resulting in three-dimensional imaging of bottom topography.

    A high-resolution map of the lakebed would offer multiple benefits, said Steven Murawski, a biological oceanographer at the University of South Florida who has done extensive bottom mapping of Florida’s coast and in the Gulf of Mexico.

    The Great Lakes map would provide fuller images of bottom features that have changed in the last 50 years due to erosion and shifting sands, giving navigators new depth findings that would improve shipping safety, Murawski said. A map also would help predict how bottom features affect storm surges and flooding as climate change continues, which he said would be invaluable information for insurance companies and municipal planners.

    Improved bottom maps also would provide precise locations of infrastructure such as pipelines that have shifted over time, crucial information for dredging and construction projects, Murawski said. He noted he has mapped some 50,000 miles (805 kilometers) of pipelines in the western Gulf of Mexico and “they’re never where they’re supposed to be.”

    Additionally, high-resolution maps would identify underwater outcroppings and ledges where fish tend to congregate, enabling scientists to get better fishery population estimates, the oceanographer added.

    Fully mapping the lakes for the first time also could reveal the location of hundreds of shipwrecks — some estimates put the number of Great Lakes wrecks at around 6,000 — and relics from ancient coastal civilizations, Boehme said.

    Though momentum for mapping is building, Congress hasn’t acted on the financing bill since the March hearing before the House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife and Fisheries. The subcommittee’s chair, Rep. Cliff Bentz of Oregon, suggested during the hearing that proponents do a better job articulating the value of a new map.

    “I know ranking members suggested finding the Edmund Fitzgerald would be a valuable thing but there must be more to it than that,” Bentz said, referring to the freighter that sank in Lake Superior in 1975. The wreckage was actually located days after the ship went down.

    Bentz’s spokesperson, Alexia Stenpzas, didn’t respond to an email from The Associated Press seeking comment on the bill’s prospects.

    Boehme said she doubts the bill will get traction in an election year, but the Great Lakes Observing System is still working toward its 2030 mapping goal. The group holds an annual conference in Traverse City, Michigan, to discuss progress and test mapping technology and has been reaching out to any boaters willing to take mapping equipment out, providing a look at small chunks of lakebed.

    “This research is for a public good,” Boehme said. “The key is persistence and going back again and again and making the case (to Congress). … We need to understand the system so we can conserve it.”

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