TikTok increasing video length from one to three minutes
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TikTok is increasing the maximum length of videos on its platform from one minute, to three.
In a blog post, external, product manager Drew Kirchhoff said the change would allow for "even richer storytelling and entertainment".
Since it launched in 2018, TikTok has limited its users to 60 seconds per video, setting it apart from competitors like YouTube.
The app says that's going to change for all its users "over the coming weeks".
![Kera Stewart's TikTok page](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/976/cpsprodpb/15A84/production/_119180788_img_1532.jpg)
Kera gets more than a million views on some of her videos - but less than a thousand on others
Kera Stewart's a drummer who's had variable success on TikTok - she's managed to top a million views on some videos, but hasn't yet worked out the secret to doing it consistently.
"Personally, I'm not a fan of the idea," she's told Radio 1 Newsbeat.
"The reason TikTok's been so successful is because it takes advantage of our short attention spans. You can get so much different content and entertainment in a short period of time.
"I feel like three minutes is going to change the app drastically."
![A phone screen with the TikTok app on it](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/976/cpsprodpb/1CE5/production/_119179370_gettyimages-1058608390.jpg)
TikTok has around 14 million users in the UK, according to the regulator Ofcom
According to the TikTok blog post, the change has come about because some users say "they'd love just a little more time".
It also points to the fact that a lot of videos on the platform end up getting split into multiple parts anyway, and says this should help with that.
Platforms for longer videos already exist, so any move like this arguably runs the risk of diluting what made TikTok a success in the first place.
But the team behind the app clearly think it's worth making the change.
"With longer videos," the blog post continues, "creators will have the canvas to create new or expanded types of content on TikTok with the flexibility of a bit more space."
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TikTok isn't the only platform that's tweaking the way it does things.
Earlier this week, the head of Instagram, Adam Mosseri announced that they're planning to make changes too.
In a video, he said the four areas they're focusing on are: how users can make money, improving the platform's shopping and messaging features - and putting more focus on video.
"People are looking to Instagram to be entertained... we have to embrace that and that means change," he said.
"What you're going to see over the next couple of months, really, is us start to experiment more in the space of what we call recommendations, so showing you things in Feed that you may not be following yet.
"We're also going to be experimenting with we embrace video more broadly. Full screen, immersive, entertaining, mobile-first video."
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