Threads confirms it is experimenting with ephemeral posts

Date:

Share post:


Disappearing posts on social networks are handy if you have a habit of deleting them through third-party tools or the context of those posts is short-lived. Earlier this month, Threads said it is testing ephemeral posts only as an internal prototype. But now, the company told TechCrunch that it is testing posts that disappear within 24 hours with a limited number of users on the social network.

While the company didn’t provide any statement, a spokesperson said this is a new and casual way to share on Threads. It also didn’t disclose if the experiment is region-specific or who could activate such posts.

App reverse engineer Alessandro Paluzzi published an ephemeral post on Friday. When you tap on the reply button, you an see the time remaining, after which the post will be deleted. Threads also shows a banner on top of the post indicating that the thread and all replies will disappear when the time ends. While the banner doesn’t specify anything about quoted replies, we observed that quoted posts have a timer similar to the original post and will disappear after the timer ends.

Image Credits: Screenshot by TechCrunch

In June, Paluzzi first posted about Threads working on disappearing posts with a screenshot highlighting a 24-hour button next to the Post button to publish a disappearing thread. Technologist Christ Messina also found hints about these posts in the iOS app’s code earlier this month. Messina had also noted that disappearing posts won’t be shared with the fediverse as Threads won’t be able to delete these posts from other ActivityPub-powered servers. Threads started allowing users to share their posts with the fediverse in June.

Posts with a 24-hour expiry could help creators who want to share an off-brand or off-topic post once in a while. They could also be useful for folks who want to comment on live events that might be irrelevant once the event is over.

In a pre-Elon Musk era, Twitter started an Instagram Stories-like format for disappearing posts called Fleets in 2020 but shut it down in 2021 because of low usage.

If Threads makes ephemeral posts widely available, it might be one of the only social networks among its rivals, such as X, Bluesky, and Mastodon, to do so.



Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

From recruiting for Palantir to landing a plane on Highway 85: meet defense tech’s wildest power broker

In 2023, defense tech recruiter Peterson Conway VIII pulled up to the offices of nuclear fusion startup...

AI benchmarking organization criticized for waiting to disclose funding from OpenAI

An organization developing math benchmarks for AI didn’t disclose that it had received funding from OpenAI until...

The Pentagon says AI is speeding up its ‘kill chain’

Leading AI developers, such as OpenAI and Anthropic, are threading a delicate needle to sell software to...

TikTok is restoring service in the US

Barely more than 12 hours after TikTok went dark in the United States, the video-sharing app is...

Trump says he will delay TikTok ban, suggests a joint venture with US ownership

TikTok went dark for users in the US on Saturday night, but it may not be gone...

Employees of failed startups are at special risk of stolen personal data through old Google logins

As if losing your job when the startup you work for collapses isn’t bad enough, now a...

AI isn’t very good at history, new paper finds

AI might excel at certain tasks like coding or generating a podcast. But it struggles to pass...

Apple lists all apps it removed alongside TikTok in the U.S.

Amid the TikTok shutdown, in a rare move, Apple published a statement and a support document listing...