Google has lent its homepage to promote a movie—the upcoming comedy film “The Internship” got a huge marketing support from the web giant, which placed the announcement of the Google+Hangout with the film’s co-stars Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson right beneath the search box on its main page, Google.com. The movie tells a story of two laid-off forty-something men, who are interns at a successful internet company (apparently Google), where their managers are in their 20s.

Twitter is stepping into a new area of e-commerce by partnering with American Express to enable its consumers to buy goods by simply typing in a hashtag of an item they want to purchase. To start using the micro blogging service for shopping purposes, users are invited to sync their Amex accounts with their Twitter profile here, at sync.americanexpress.com/twitter.

Facebook wants to make its platform as developer-friendly as possible. The social media giant launches Developers Live, a Facebook app, which provides valuable curated content (tutorials, live and recorded speaking sessions and other visual educational pieces) and also helps them keep up to date on the latest Facebook news. The new hub targets mobile and game app developers as well as website managers and publishers, who will learn how to make a better content for the web and how to use the platform to maximize their profits.   

Surprisingly enough, now the fastest growing social media platform is not Pinterest (as it used to be), but Twitter, as reported by GlobalWebIndex. According to the study conducted across the 31 markets, the micro blogging platform is gaining momentum now and getting more active users than other social media platforms—the site is followed by Facebook and Google+, respectively.

YouTube is planning to introduce paid subscriptions for some individual channels, and this will start a whole new era in the history of the global video sharing community in particular, and online video in general. With this move, YouTube aims to attract more professional content makers as well as advertisers and refined audience to make the video platform a stronger rival of television. The first paid subscriptions are said to be launched in the second quarter of this year.

The mircoblogging site Twitter is going to allow posting micro-videos within tweets. The platform is allegedly going to enable its users to integrate up to six-second videos, created using Vine, with their tweets. The start-up service, which is believed to be a video-based rival to Instagram (now Facebook-owned), was purchased by Twitter in October 2012.