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Instagram’s Threads: all the updates on the new Twitter competitor

As Twitter continues to flail about under Elon Musk, all eyes are on the newly launched Instagram Threads as a potential replacement. Meta launched Threads on iOS, Android, and the web on July 5th — a little bit ahead of schedule.

Two days in, Mark Zuckerberg said Threads has registered over 70 million accounts, and it’s still growing.

In an interview about Threads with The Verge, Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri explains why the platform wants to take on Twitter. “Obviously, Twitter pioneered the space,” Mosseri says. “And there are a lot of good offerings out there for public conversations. But just given everything that was going on, we thought there was an opportunity to build something that was open and something that was good for the community that was already using Instagram.”

Rumors about the new Meta-owned platform were swirling for months, with a March report from Platformer revealing the company was “exploring a standalone decentralized social network for sharing text updates.” In June, Alex Heath leaked the details of a companywide meeting where the app was shown off and shared the first glimpse at Threads.

Threads is “Instagram’s text-based conversation app” where “communities come together to discuss everything from the topics you care about today to what’ll be trending tomorrow.” The app is closely tied to Instagram, meaning you’ll get to use the same username across both apps as well as quickly follow all of the accounts you’ve been following on Instagram.

  • The “new” Threads desktop app is available for Windows PCs.

    Yes, Windows users can get the Threads app Mark Zuckerberg is showing here from the Microsoft Store

    But once it’s installed, you’ll get the same desktop web app experience (loaded in Microsoft’s Edge web browser) that we’ve had access to since August.


  • Wes Davis

    Feb 24

    Wes Davis

    Threads trending topics roll out to more users.

    It’s been 12 days since Meta announced it was testing a way to easily follow what people are talking about on Threads, and now many users are reporting seeing it — including our own Richard Lawler.

    I don’t have it yet, because I’m cursed. If you do, you’ll see “Today’s topics” either between posts in the For You feed or in the search tab.


    Two screenshots showing “Today’s topics” in the search tab (left) and in the For You feed (right).
    Threads finally has trending topics.
    Screenshot: Richard Lawler
  • Threads (tentatively) now lets you save drafts and take pictures from within the app.

    Zuck says both features are in testing, and Meta just forwarded us the below:

    Drafts: allows you to save in-progress posts for future editing and posting.

    Threads Camera: opens your phone’s camera directly in the Threads composer, making it easier to share photos on Threads.

    Today’s release of Draft and Camera are initial tests. Currently, you can save one draft post, and you can take one photo per post with the Threads Camera.

    Correction, 7:34PM ET: Meta originally told us you could take videos too, but now says videos aren’t available yet. If you don’t see the options, it’s because “This is a global test with a limited number of people.”


  • Wes Davis

    Feb 21

    Wes Davis

    Meta is testing out Facebook cross-posts to Threads.

    Meta is only rolling out the test to its Facebook iOS app, and not in the EU, the company confirmed to TechCrunch today. Threads posts already show up on Facebook, provided you don’t opt out.

    TechCrunch writes that when user whimchic tried the feature in the Facebook iOS app, the post went to both platforms, but without any indication on Threads that it was a cross-post.


  • Emma Roth

    Feb 12

    Emma Roth

    Threads is testing ‘Today’s topics’ to tell users what’s trending in the US

    An image showing the Threads logo
    Image: The Verge

    Threads is rolling out a new test in the US that shows a list of popular topics that other users are discussing, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced in a post on Threads. The list will appear on the search page and in the For You feed, allowing you to browse through posts about a particular topic.

    In addition to testing a way to save posts, Meta recently said it will add controls to limit political content recommendations on Threads.

    Read Article >
  • Threads will finally let you save posts.

    The feature will work similarly to bookmarks on Instagram, allowing you to save posts and look at them later. It’s still in a “limited test” though, so you might not have it right away.


  • Threads is preparing to venture deeper into the fediverse.

    That comes courtesy of Alessandro Paluzzi, who frequently reverse engineers and reveals Threads and Instagram features. The new option lets you turn fediverse sharing on and off at will and you can easily copy your username formatted for the decentralized Activity Pub social protocol.

    Instagram boss Adam Mosseri said recently that Threads users will also be able to follow and interact with fediverse accounts from Threads, though their accounts will have to be public to do so.


    A pair of screenshots showing that a new Fediverse sharing feature is coming.
    Fediverse sharing (BETA) is on its way.
    Screenshots: Alessandro Paluzzi
  • Toward a unified taxonomy of text-based social media use

    Natural History Museum In London
    Let’s check out the specimens!
    photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images

    The most important thing to know about social media is this: Most people don’t post.

    You know this. I know this. God knows this. I am going to limit my analysis to text-based sites because video sites such as TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram are not my ministry. This analysis may transfer in whole or in part to those platforms, for all I know.

    Read Article >
  • Threads is working on its version of trending topics.

    Instagram head Adam Mosseri confirmed in a post today that the Threads team is working on “surfacing trends”, so that new feature is definitely on the way.

    Last month, leaker Alessandro Paluzzi posted a screenshot of a feature entitled “Today’s topics” that seems similar to X’s “Trending Topics”, which display topics that users are engaging with the most. He said it could also include reviews by specialists, to avoid trends like "Taylor Swift AI."


  • Wes Davis

    Jan 23

    Wes Davis

    Threads is working on draft-saving for posts.

    So get ready to sit on those hot takes a little longer. Alessandro Paluzzi, who regularly finds new features by reverse engineering apps, posted a screenshot showing this new “Save draft” option.


  • Threads might let you save posts.

    That’s according to Alessandro Paluzzi, who regularly spots features in the works for apps like Threads and Instagram.

    I’m not much of a bookmarker myself, but if you are, I’m hoping for you that this feature comes out soon.


  • Threads let some users sort their search results by “Latest,” but Meta says this was a mistake.

    “Earlier today, an internal prototype was accidentally made available for a small number of people — this is not something we’re testing externally at this time,“ the company told TechCrunch. It’s a shame, since sorting by latest would make it much easier to track breaking news on Threads. Apparently Meta thinks the feature would create a “substantial safety loophole.


  • Trending topics on Threads?

    It looks like the app might be adding a list of topics “based on what people are engaging with right now,” according to app developer Alessandro Paluzzi. You can see how the feature might look in the screenshot below, which has a “Today’s topic” heading positioned beneath the search bar.

    Meanwhile, a separate post from Paluzzi also suggests Threads might add a feature that shows live updates for “upcoming, ongoing and past sports events.”


  • If Threads has felt different to you lately, you’re not alone.

    Adam Mosseri says that Threads has had some issues with what he calls “low quality recommendations” over the last few weeks. He says that “a lot of it” should be fixed and that things should get “much better over the next few weeks.”


  • Jay Peters

    Dec 19, 2023

    Jay Peters

    Threads’ in-development API has been used to make posts.

    That’s according to a Threads developer, at least. Can’t wait for Techmeme to use the API eventually. (And, hopefully, many other accounts.)


  • Wes Davis

    Dec 17, 2023

    Wes Davis

    A new Threads feature might add a little color to holiday posts.

    Posts wishing people a happy New Year on Meta’s Threads might come with fun colors and effects to celebrate the holiday.

    Alessandro Paluzzi, who frequently discovers new features (like the Threads edit button) before they’re out, by reverse engineering apps, posted a screenshot of the festive text in action.


  • Wes Davis

    Dec 16, 2023

    Wes Davis

    Threads accounts will have to be public to show in the fediverse.

    Instagram boss Adam Mosseri posted a little more about the plan to integrate Threads with the fediverse.

    While responding to some skepticism about pushing posts out to other ActivityPub instances, Mosseri said only public accounts will show in the wider fediverse outside of Threads, and — though he said this isn’t fully decided — only after users “explicitly opt in.”


  • Jay Peters

    Dec 15, 2023

    Jay Peters

    Adam Mosseri spells out Threads’ plans for the fediverse

    Illustration of the Threads app logo
    Illustration: The Verge

    On Friday, two days after Threads finally started publicly testing ActivityPub integration, Instagram head Adam Mosseri shared a thread on Threads detailing the company’s plans for its continued integration with the fediverse. Right now, it’s possible to follow a few Threads accounts (including Mosseri’s) from other platforms, but Meta has much bigger plans for Threads interoperability that Mosseri says will take “the better part of a year” to realize.

    Here’s what’s in the works, according to Mosseri.

    Read Article >
  • Jay Peters

    Dec 14, 2023

    Jay Peters

    A Threads post on Mastodon!

    I’m seeing Adam Mosseri’s new Threads video when I look at his Threads account via mastodon.social on the web. It even showed up in my regular Mastodon feed! I can’t believe this actually works. Mastodon CEO Eugen Rochko is pretty excited, too.


    A screenshot of a Threads post from Adam Mosseri on Mastodon.
    Screenshot by Jay Peters / The Verge
  • Jon Porter

    Dec 14, 2023

    Jon Porter

    Threads launches for nearly half a billion more users in Europe

    An image showing the Threads logo
    Image: The Verge

    Meta’s Twitter competitor, Threads, is now available in the European Union, CEO Mark Zuckerberg has announced. “Today we’re opening Threads to more countries in Europe,” Zuckerberg wrote in a post on Threads. The launch follows the service’s debut in the US and over 100 other countries across the world, including the UK, in July 2023. But until now, Threads hasn’t been available to the 448 million people living in the EU, and the company has even blocked EU-based users from accessing the service via VPN.

    To coincide with today’s launch, Meta is giving users in the region the ability to browse Threads without needing a profile. Actually posting or interacting with content will still require an Instagram account, however. The move was earlier reported by The Wall Street Journal.

    Read Article >
  • Jay Peters

    Dec 14, 2023

    Jay Peters

    Threads really is joining the Fediverse.

    A Threads user, Kevin Beaumont, shared screenshots of Adam Mosseri’s account on the Mastodon client Ivory, and on Mastodon, Beaumont shared screenshots of following Mosseri’s Threads account from his Mastodon account. It’s happening!


  • Dec 13, 2023

    David Pierce and Wes Davis

    Threads is officially starting to test ActivityPub integration

    An image showing the Threads logo
    Illustration: The Verge

    Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg posted on Threads that the platform is beginning to test making Threads posts available on Mastodon and other ActivityPub-supporting services. Zuckerberg wrote that making Threads work with the interoperable standard “will give people more choice over how they interact and it will help content reach more people.”

    Joining the fediverse — the decentralized world of social media that includes Mastodon, Pixelfed, and other services that all interoperate through ActivityPub — has been on the Threads team’s to-do list since the very beginning. Instagram head Adam Mosseri told The Verge in July that he believed decentralizing the platform was key to making it relevant to a new generation of creators. “I think we might be a more compelling platform for creators, particularly for the newer creators who are more and more savvy, if we are a place where you don’t have to feel like you have to trust us forever,” he said at the time.

    Read Article >
  • Jay Peters

    Dec 12, 2023

    Jay Peters

    Meta wants to “extend” its fact-checking program for Threads in 2024.

    Threads currently matches the fact-check ratings from Facebook and Instagram, but “our goal is for fact-checking partners to have the ability to review and rate misinformation on the app,” Instagram head Adam Mosseri said in a post on Threads.

    Improving fact-checking tools could make Threads a more attractive place for publishers. (The forthcoming API might help, too.)


  • Richard Lawler

    Dec 8, 2023

    Richard Lawler

    Meta updates Threads link referrer so publishers can see where their traffic comes from.

    Instagram boss Adam Mosseri’s small announcement is important to anyone who publishes content on the internet. Until now, traffic from Threads was indistinguishable from Instagram in the metrics used by sites like this one, But now that it has a separate link referrer, site owners can see for themselves how much traffic it’s sending in comparison to competitors.

    On the other hand, Twitter / X allegedly just signed up 10 million new people in a week, if you can believe that.


  • Jess Weatherbed

    Dec 8, 2023

    Jess Weatherbed

    Threads is counting down to an EU launch next week

    An image showing the Threads logo
    The lengthy delay in Threads European rollout has been attributed to the EU’s DMA rules.
    Illustration: The Verge

    Following its rollout in countries like the US and UK this past July, Threads will finally be expanded to users in the European Union on December 14th. Meta hasn’t made an official announcement yet, instead opting to sneakily update the Threads website with an untitled countdown timer (which won’t be viewable in countries where Threads is already available) with just under six days remaining on the clock. 

    European Instagram users can also search for the term “ticket” within the app to discover a digital invitation to Threads, alongside a scannable QR code and a launch time — which may vary depending on the country in which the user is based. We have contacted Meta to confirm the details, like which EU countries Threads might launch in, and will update this story if we hear back.

    Read Article >