Social media giant Meta has announced it is working on a new "text sharing" platform, likely believed to rival Twitter, at a time when the latter faces unprecedented hiccups.
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Meta, which owns Facebook and WhatsApp, confirmed in a statement late on Friday reports that it was starting work on the platform. It said it was "exploring a standalone, decentralized social network for sharing text updates."
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"We believe there's an opportunity for a separate space where creators and public figures can share timely updates about their interests," the statement added.
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The new Meta platform is designed to allow interoperation with other platforms including Mastodon, a decentralized social media platform that runs slightly similarly to Twitter. This would give users the ability to broadcast posts on other networks.
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The feature is not available on Twitter. Last December, the platform's new owner Elon Musk briefly banned Twitter accounts which provided links to other social media platforms.
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Other platforms such as Instagram and YouTube also don't allow such interoperation, as they are designed with strict technological walls.
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In 2021, after a whistleblower accused the Facebook parent company of being aware of the harm its platform was causing users, it rebranded as Meta. Founder Mark Zuckerberg launched the so-called metaverse— a hypothetical 3D network based on virtual and augmented reality that has, since then, failed to live up to its promised success.
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While Twitter and Meta's original platform Facebook have been longtime rivals, Meta's decision to launch a "text sharing app" comes at a time of unprecedented upheaval for Twitter.
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Since billionaire Musk took over the company last October, the platform has suffered outages, layoffs and an exodus of advertisers.
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Twitter is now said to be operating on skeletal staff after mass layoffs and some walkouts that saw the company lose around two-thirds of its workforce. Recurring glitches are often blamed on said layoffs.
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