Twitter announced Monday that users can now edit photos inside its own app, flipping the bird to one Facebook-owned entity.

The site has updated its app for iPhone and Android to “introduce a few new ways to enhance the images you tweet.”
The news comes just hours after Instagram cut itself off from the tweet-verse. Instagram announced last week that it would remove support for Twitter Cards and followed that up by dismantling photo integration.
Now, only links to Instagram photos will work in Twitter.
The panic of not being able to upload artificially aged snapshots should be short lived with the updates.
Twitter is introducing eight filters, ranging from black and white to vintage. Cropping and pinch to zoom are part of the editing package.
The updates also bring a bird’s-eye view element that lets users see how each filter will affect their photos in a single grid view. Photogs can swipe through to compare options.
The final edit tool is a wand that, when tapped, implements an auto-enhance function to balance light and colors.
If all this isn’t simple enough, check out this vid that Twitter created to explain the filters:
The updates are available in Google Play and the App Store.
Instagram also released an update for its iOS camera Monday, adding a preview feature that pulls up the camera roll’s most recent pic, an optical grid guide for lining up live photos (plus a permanent grid guide to scale and crop) and noticeable speed enhancements.
The iPhone 5 camera got its own improved camera roll image selector, too, while Instagram raised the level of its tilt-shift feature to give you the “blur” you see in the preview screen.
Instagramers also added Foursquare integration so that when users touch a button, they enter the Foursquare app (or mobile website) and receive instant venue info.
Not to be left out, the photo site feted its Android camera with a new filter (don’t worry, iOS gets it too).
“Willow” is optimized for portrait taking with its monochrome filter touched by purple tones and a halo of translucent white.
Twitter, though only just starting out on the photo filter path, likely has many more features to come, while Instagram, the king of social network snapping, won’t relinquish its thrown without a fight.
Pose off, anyone?
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