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BlackBerry? Like, so not cool, say young users

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BlackBerry’s messaging service BBM was criticised for helping to connect young rioters who fought police and wrecked shops in Liverpool, London and other cities in 2011.
Reuters

If you want to know how BlackBerry lost its mojo in a major consumer market, spend some time with a bunch of British teens.

The phone that once so dominated the UK youth market that its messaging service BBM was even blamed for helping to connect young rioters who fought police and wrecked shops in London and other cities in 2011, has now lost its cool.

BlackBerry has been usurped by Apple and Android-run phones, and BBM has been eclipsed by the emergence of free messaging apps that work across a range of devices.

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“I use WhatsApp and Kik with all my friends and family. You can use these on any device even if you can’t afford an iPhone,” said 14-year-old Euan McPhillips, a schoolboy from Gerrards Cross, just north of London.

US-based WhatsApp and Canada’s Kik Interactive are two of five major “cross-platform” messaging services that have built up big followings and which are also being tipped as the next big takeover targets for the likes of Facebook and Yahoo.

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The three others are WeChat in China, developed by Internet company Tencent Holdings Ltd and promoted by Argentine footballer Lionel Messi; South Korea’s KakaoTalk, run by privately-held Kakao Corp; and Japan-based Line, a unit of Naver Corp of South Korea.

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