Heaviest users of Snapchat will face a small charge for storage

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Social media platform Snapchat will ask its most prolific users to pay a small monthly sum to ensure that their “Memories” live on.

Memories are a feature, which the platform introduced in 2016, to allow users to save photos and videos, instead of letting them disappear after a short time.

But the success of the feature — more than 1 trillion Memories have been saved — has pushed Snapchat’s parent company, Snap Inc., to introduce paid storage plans to help cope with rising infrastructure costs, it said. Charging users who have the most storage needs, the company said, will ensure that the vast majority of users will continue to have access.

“When we first launched Memories, we never expected it to grow to what it has become today,” the company said in a news release last week.

Snapchat has 460 million daily active users and 900 million monthly active users, according to recent data, making it among the most popular social media platforms in the world. About 60% of its users are between ages 18 and 34.

Only users with more than 5 gigabytes of Memories — the equivalent of thousands of Snaps — will face the new charge, the company says.

But the charge doesn’t kick in until 12 months from now. Snapchat will continue to store Memories that exceed the 5-gigabyte storage limit for about that time. If a user is over the limit and does not sign up for a plan, their oldest photos and videos will be saved. The most recent ones that exceed the limit are the ones that will be deleted.

Users are always able to download their photos and videos directly to their devices, the company said.

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