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Screenshots Are Now Serious Business
Mint Kolkata
|August 02, 2025
Over the last five years, screenshots have evolved from playful archive to professional tool. But they are also equal parts memory bank and clutter trap
Sheen Megha Akhlaq has 3,100 screenshots on her phone. They cover everything. From performance ads she's tracking as a brand executive at a skincare company, to reference images for campaign ideas, and WhatsApp chats with content creators she forwards to her boss to signal follow-ups on marketing initiatives. "Half my job is carried through these screenshots," says the 24-year-old from Mumbai.
She recalls how not too long ago, her gallery was mostly filled with screengrabs of unsolicited texts from men—school and college-era receipts that made gossip feel more real, less made-up. Now, that folder has more work than whispers.
Over the last five years, screenshots—an image of data displayed on a mobile or desktop screen—have evolved into a cornerstone of modern work culture. The shift from playful archive to professional tool happened largely during the pandemic, when official communication moved online, and remote work turned casual screenshots into a means to share work-related updates.
While the concept dates back to the 1960s, the modern-day screenshot found cultural footing in the 1980s, when gamers began mailing in scorecard screengrabs to magazines for a shot at printed glory, according to a 2020 Vice article.
In 2011, Snapchat brought in disappearing Stories—and with it, "screenshot notifications" that made users think twice before grabbing someone's self-destructing post. Instagram briefly tried the same before dropping it, though the warning still pops up if you screenshot a disappearing DM in "vanish mode".
Today, screenshots are serious business.
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