SnapChat was originally intended to be an app for sending nude pictures and was called 'Picaboo'.
Snapchat Started as 'Picaboo,' a Sexting App
In July 2011, three Stanford students launched an app called Picaboo with a simple, somewhat scandalous pitch: send self-destructing photos to your significant other. The idea came from Reggie Brown during a conversation about sexting, and his co-founders Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy ran with it. The app that would become a $24 billion company literally started as a tool for sending nudes that wouldn't stick around.
The name "Picaboo" was Brown's riff on peek-a-boo, the children's game about things appearing and disappearing. It was cheeky, playful, and absolutely intentional. When blogger Nicole James first heard the pitch, she immediately recognized what the app was really for. The founders weren't naive about it either—they drafted press releases describing how "Picaboo lets you and your boyfriend send photos for peeks and not keeps!"
The Launch That Nobody Noticed
Despite the provocative concept, Picaboo flopped spectacularly at first. By the end of summer 2011, the app had attracted just 127 users. The founders tried everything—handing out flyers at shopping malls, pitching it on college campuses—but the "impermanence" angle felt creepy to most people. Why would you need photos to disappear unless you had something to hide?
Then came a legal problem: a photo-book company already owned the Picaboo name and sent a cease-and-desist letter. In September 2011, the app relaunched as Snapchat, and something clicked.
From Sexting to Billion-Dollar Filters
What changed wasn't the technology but the positioning. Snapchat shifted from "send nudes safely" to "share authentic moments without the pressure of permanence." Suddenly it wasn't about hiding scandalous photos—it was about freedom from Instagram's highlight-reel culture. You could send a goofy face, a boring lunch, a random thought, and it would vanish. No digital footprint, no regrets.
The pivot worked. By late 2012, users were sharing 20 million photos per day. By 2013, Facebook offered $3 billion to buy Snapchat. Spiegel turned it down. The sexting app had evolved into something much bigger: a new way to communicate that prioritized the ephemeral over the eternal.
Ironically, Reggie Brown—the guy who invented the disappearing photos concept and designed Snapchat's ghost logo—got pushed out of the company early on. After years of legal battles, Snap Inc. settled with him in 2014 for $158 million. Not bad for the friend who came up with the idea during a conversation about sexting.
The Legacy of Impermanence
Today, Snapchat has over 400 million daily users who send billions of snaps filled with dog-ear filters, rainbow vomit, and dancing hot dogs. The platform bears almost no resemblance to Picaboo's original sexting mission—except for one thing: photos still disappear. That core insight, born from a slightly sketchy idea in a Stanford dorm room, changed how an entire generation thinks about digital communication.
- Instagram added Stories (disappearing content)
- Facebook added Stories
- WhatsApp added Status (Stories)
- Even LinkedIn jumped on the ephemeral content trend
So yes, Snapchat started as Picaboo, an app explicitly designed for sending nude pictures that would self-destruct. What began as a solution to a very specific problem became a social media revolution. Sometimes the best ideas come from the most unexpected places—even if those places are slightly NSFW.