What You Need to Know
- The new app lets users bring over their existing follower lists and account names from Instagram, which has over 2 billion users.
- “There should be a public conversations app with 1 billion-plus people on it,” Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said
- Elon Musk bought Twitter, which has more than 300 million subscribers, for $44 billion in October.
More than 70 million users have signed up for Meta Platforms Inc.’s new app Threads, designed as a direct rival to Twitter and the most serious threat yet to Elon Musk’s struggling social-media site.
On Threads, people can post text and links and reply to or repost messages from others.
The app will let users port over their existing follower lists and account names from Instagram, Meta’s photo and video-sharing app that counts major brands, celebrities and creators among its more than 2 billion users.
“There should be a public conversations app with 1 billion-plus people on it,” Meta Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said in a post on his Threads account. “Twitter has had the opportunity to do this but hasn’t nailed it. Hopefully we will.”
Despite the surge in sign-ups, Threads held steady, with only sporadic reports of temporary glitches.
U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who has millions of followers on Twitter, posted late Wednesday: “I think my app is bricked. It was just as I hit send on a long post of Queens food recommendations.”
Other users talked about the new app’s terms and conditions, which state a Threads account can only be completely deleted if a user also wipes their Instagram account.
Zuckerberg’s own posts on the app weren’t loading for some people.
The company still has work to do. In replies to Threads users, Instagram head Adam Mosseri acknowledged the lack of certain basic features expected on modern social media apps such as tagging, searching by hashtags and a home feed for people you follow — enhancements which he said are on their list of to-dos.
But the strong early interest is a clear sign of demand, Zuckerberg wrote on Threads.
Many of Instagram’s influential users have been asking the company to make a text-based app, according to Connor Hayes, a vice president of product.
“Creators were telling us, ‘We want an alternative to what’s out there, and we don’t want to start over and have to build out a following from zero,’” Hayes said in an interview, without mentioning Twitter specifically.
Instagram and Facebook, both owned by Meta, have a long — and successful — history of copying products from upstart internet competitors.
The company’s Reels feature was a knockoff of TikTok’s viral video app, and its Stories disappearing posts followed the rise of Snapchat.
Meta’s apps in the past have competed indirectly for user attention with Twitter by courting news publishers, politicians and other high-profile people to favor posting on one versus the other.
Threads vs. Twitter
The arrival of Threads marks the first time Meta is releasing a Twitter lookalike.
Late Wednesday, Zuckerberg tweeted for the first time in 11 years — taking a playful swipe at his billionaire rival, who in turn called Instagram fake.
A lawyer for Musk sent a letter to Zuckerberg accusing Meta of misusing trade secrets and other intellectual property in the creation of Threads after hiring former Twitter employees, Semafor reported on Thursday.
A Meta spokesman confirmed the letter from Musk’s attorney, and posted on Threads that no one on the new app’s engineering team is a former Twitter employee.