T.I., Busta Rhymes & Others Fall For Instagram Rule Change Hoax

BYNoah C4.7K Views
Link Copied to Clipboard!
Carl Court/Getty Images
Instagram logo.

#NONEWRULES

On Tuesday, a ton of celebrities were reposting on Instagram a screenshot of a paragraph in opposition to new guidelines that the app was supposedly adopting. The message warned that starting the following day, Instagram would own your content, meaning it would have the authorization to use anything you have posted against you, whether deleted or not. People were sharing this photo to explicitly express their denial of this authorization: "I do not give Instagram or any entities associated with Instagram permission to use my pictures, information, messages or posts, both past and future." The message even went as far as to cite legal justifications for the privacy and ownership of one's content. 

Understandably, this frightened many, especially rappers who often post questionable or incriminating stuff that could leave them targeted for probation violation, for example. However, turns out all this hysteria was for nothing. Instagram dispelled these rumors with a brief message from their brand communications manager, Stephanie Otway: “There’s no truth to this post”.  

Perhaps the invalidity of this post was foreseeable, given it all the grammatical errors in it and possessing the paranoia of a chain email your grandmother would send you. But as the paragraph stated and many captioned their posts, "better safe than sorry". 

About The Author
<b>Staff Writer</b> <!--BR--> Noah's first interaction with hip-hop was in first grade when he bought Jay-Z's "The Blueprint,” which was quickly confiscated by his mother and replaced with Bow Wow's "Unleashed" as a compromise. Noah's favorite album is his playlist of Playboi Carti leaks. The greatest source of joy in Noah's life is anything Lil Uzi Vert does on social media.