Skip to main content

Yik Yak app steps up its game by introducing photos

Yik Yak, the anonymous social app that lets college students post text-based posts, has announced that users will now be able to share photos on the service.

The startup wrote in a blog post, “Sure, you could describe that amazing eggs Benedict your mom just made for breakfast (let’s be real, sometimes being home for summer has its perks), but it’s often more tantalizing to share a drool-inducing photo of it, too.”

Recommended Videos

The company had been testing photos in a few Yik Yak communities, but will now roll out to all users over the next few days. To avoid nudity, bullying, and sexual harassment, the company made sure to moderate those photos before they showed up in the app.

While photos with faces won’t be allowed in local feeds, they can be found in the Explore section of the app. The Yik Yak team promises nothing will change about how Yik Yak works, and that users can remain anonymous.

The startup says, “no inappropriate photos (anything you wouldn’t send to your mother), illegal content, or faces will be allowed in local feeds,” and it will approve all photos before publishing them into the feeds. 

To make the app feel more secure, the company also introduced phone verification to combat spam.

Yik Yak was launched by Tyler Droll and Brooks Huffington, two students who attended Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina. Since its launch in 2013, Yik Yak has reached 3.6 million users, which many of them are high school and college students spread among 1,500 different colleges, according to a Business Insider report.

Yik Yak’s main feature is allowing students to make anonymous “yaks.” Similar to reddit, users can upvote, downvote, and comment on posts.

If you aren’t able to post photos yet, Yik Yak says the feature should arrive within the next few days.

You can download Yik Yak app from the App Store and Google Play Store.

Karen Tumbokon
Karen is a technology, music and entertainment writer. Originally from New Jersey, Karen began her writing career in music…
A PC emulator is now on the iPhone app store after previous rejection
A photo of an Apple screen and a close-up of the App Store icon with three notifications on it.

A new game emulator for iOS has joined the party. UTM, an open-source PC operating system emulator, has released UTM SE after a lengthy review process and a previous rejection.

You can download UTM SE for free on App Store for iOS and visionOS, and it'll be added to AltStore Pal, an alternative app marketplace in the EU. "Shoutouts to AltStore team for their help and to Apple for reconsidering their policy," UTM posted on X (formerly Twitter).

Read more
The Google app on your iPhone just got a hidden new feature
iPhone display showing Google image in black on white

Here's some exciting news for users of the Google Search app on iPhone and iPad. According to 9to5Google, you can now personalize the home screen icon of the Google Search app to reflect your mood better.

The traditional Google app icon features red, yellow, blue, and green on a white background. However, you can now customize it to have a dark background or opt for a black icon on a white background or a white icon on a black background.

Read more
Google is making it easier to ditch your iPhone for an Android phone
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra and iPhone 15 Pro in hand.

Switching phones is never a smooth process, even if you’re switching between two different Android phones. However, when you’re trying to switch from an iPhone to Android or vice versa, it can be extra complicated -- and you can lose data and apps that you rely on. This is especially the case with Apple-to-Android transfers because the iPhone has a much stronger ecosystem lock-in with things like iMessage, iCloud backups, and exclusive apps like Overcast and Hyperlapse.

The good news is that with its Data Transfer Tool (also called Pixel Migrate on Pixel devices), Google may be trying to mitigate some of the phone-switching problems that arise -- specifically, losing access to your Live Photos. According to an APK teardown from Android Authority, Google’s Data Transfer Tool will finally resolve the problem of migrating iOS Live Photos to Android. It will do this by converting them over as Motion Photos.

Read more