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"Mark Zuckerberg says he’s not thinking about monetization of users on his Twitter clone, Threads, but that’s a lie. His business model is selling our data to advertisers," he tweeted Thursday.
Threads had a wildly successful launch amid a backlash against Twitter over limits on how many posts could be viewed. Now Threads is doing the same thing.
Mark Zuckerberg has unveiled Threads, a clone of Twitter designed to lure people turned off by the social network’s changes under owner Elon Musk. And in its first five days, 100 million people ...
Here’s what personal data is collected by Meta’s Threads, as well as by Twitter, Bluesky, Mastodon, Spill, and Hive Social.
Recent data indicated Meta Platforms' new app text-based app Threads has experienced declines in two metrics used to measure engagement from levels it posted shortly after rolling out.
Threads, the Meta-owned Twitter clone that launched this week, will always be hindered by its own content guidelines. The app is dry at best, and at worst, leeching your personal data.
The Margin Meta Threads: How to sign up for the Twitter rival — and why you should think twice before deleting it Here’s what you need to know about the Instagram spinoff that launched late ...
Data shows that a sudden spike in interest in Meta's Threads—which surpassed 100 million sign-ups in five days, Mark Zuckerberg boasted yesterday—has likely already put a tiny dent in Twitter ...
Fueling Threads’ rapid growth has been Meta’s use of Instagram as a springboard to sign up new users, along with what many Threads users have identified as a dissatisfaction with Twitter.
As Instagram’s new Twitter rival Threads soars into the double-digit millions after launching on ... That’s an average of 518,000 new downloads per day for Twitter, data.ai notes. By ...
Meta’s Twitter alternative promises that it will work with decentralized platforms, giving you greater control of your data. You can hold the company to that—if you don't sign up.