Facebook has tried to compete with Twitter in numerous ways over the
years, including copying signature Twitter features such as hashtags and
trending topics. But now Facebook’s parent company is taking perhaps its
biggest swipe at Twitter yet.
Meta on Wednesday officially
launched a new app called Threads, which is intended to offer a space for real-time
conversations online, a function that has long been Twitter’s core
selling point.
The app appears to have many
similarities to Twitter, from the layout to the product description. The
listing, which first appeared earlier this week as a teaser, emphasizes its
potential to build a following and connect with like-minded people.
“The vision for Threads is to create an option and
friendly public space for conversation,” Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a Threads post following
the launch. “We hope to take what
Instagram does best and create a new experience around text, ideas, and
discussing what’s on your mind.”
![](https://i.imgur.com/rPJvReH.jpg)
Zuckerberg said on his
verified Threads account that the app passed 2 million sign-ups
in the first two hours. Later on Wednesday, he wrote that
Threads “passed 5 million sign ups in the first four hours.”
He also
responded to posts and shared his thoughts on whether Threads will ever be
bigger than Twitter.
“It’ll take some time, but I think
there should be a public conversations app with 1 billion+ people on it.
Twitter has had the opportunity to do this but hasn’t nailed it,” Zuckerberg
wrote on Threads. “Hopefully we will.”
The app’s listing describes it as
a place where communities can come together to discuss everything from the
topics they care about today to what’s trending.
“Whatever it is you’re interested in, you can follow and connect directly
with your favorite creators and others who love the same things — or build a
loyal following of your own to share your ideas, opinions and creativity with
the world,” it
reads.
Meta said messages posted to
Threads will have a 500 character limit. The company said it was bringing the
app to 100 countries via Apple’s iOS and Android.
After downloading the app, users
are asked to link up their Instagram page, customize their profile and follow
the same accounts they already follow on Instagram. The look is similar to
Twitter with a familiar layout, text-based feed, the ability repost and quote
other Thread posts. But it also blends Instagram’s existing aesthetic and
offers the ability to share posts from Threads directly to Instagram Stories.
Verified Instagram accounts are also automatically verified on Threads. Thread
accounts can also be listed as public or private.
The new app joins a growing list
of Twitter rivals and could pose the biggest threat to Twitter of the bunch,
given Meta’s vast resources and its massive audience.
![](https://i.imgur.com/iQLtPnl.jpg)
It also comes amid heightened
turmoil at Twitter, which experienced an outage over
the weekend, followed by an announcement that the site had imposed temporary
limits on how many tweets its users are able to read while using the app.
Twitter owner Elon Musk said these restrictions had been applied “to
address extreme levels of data scraping and system manipulation.” Commenting on
the launch of Threads Monday, he tweeted: “Thank goodness they’re so sanely
run,” parroting reported comments by Meta executives that appeared to take a
jab at Musk’s erratic behavior.
Since acquiring Twitter in
October, Musk has turned the social media platform on its head, alienating
advertisers and some of its highest-profile users. He is now looking for ways
to return the platform to growth. Twitter announced Monday
that users would soon need to pay for TweetDeck, a tool that allows people to
organize and easily monitor the accounts they follow.
Twitter is also attempting to
encroach on Meta’s domain. In May, Twitter added encrypted
messaging and said calls would follow, developments that could
allow the platform to compete with Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp, also owned
by Meta.
The escalating rivalry between the
two companies only appears to have added to the rivalry between Musk and Meta
CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
In response to a tweet last month
from a user about Threads, Musk wrote: “I’m sure Earth can’t wait to be
exclusively under Zuck’s thumb with no other options.” In a followup
tweet, Musk teased the idea of a cage match with Zuckerberg.
Zuckerberg fired back in an
Instagram story by posting a screenshot of Musk’s tweet overlaid with the
caption: “Send Me Location.”
And after the Threads app debuted,
Zuckerberg tweeted an
image of two cartoon Spider-Men pointing at each other.
Source: CNN