Facebook “Live Video”: Will This Be A Periscope Killer?

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New Facebook Logo

If pictures of your friends’ posts in your Facebook feed wasn’t annoying enough, imagine seeing them broadcast live.

Well, that will soon become a reality. Facebook just announced that its “Live Video” (which is Facebook’s version of Periscope and Meerkat), is being tested on a small number of users in US before eventually rolling out to everyone. Here’s what its interface looks like:

facebook-live-video-stream

“Live video streams automatically appear in their friends’ Facebook news feeds, and broadcasts that have concluded are saved in the timeline like any other video” said Facebook in a blog post.

For the past few months, Facebook has tested live video streaming on a set of high-profile users, such as NBC’s ‘Nightly News’ anchor Lester Holt and Martha Stewart, who used it to answer Thanksgiving questions last week. Even brands, such as Bethenny Frankel’s reduced-calorie food line Skinnygirl, played with it.

Using that exposure from popular and well-followed accounts gives it a larger platform (after all, Facebook boasts 1 billion active users every day) to compete against Meerkat and Twitter-owned Periscope, two services that offer similar capabilities but on a smaller scale.

Coupled with its booming mobile usage, where it makes 78 percent of its total revenue, video is very valuable for Facebook since it can charge advertisers more to spend on the feature. While there are no immediate plans to sell pre-roll ads on the live streams, it could be tempting option in the future.