Elon Musk's Twitter staff are flocking to Meta rival Threads

Even Elon Musk’s own employees are using Threads! Twitter staff are flocking to the Meta rival – with one saying it’s ‘just better’

  • Twitter’s workforce are flocking to Meta’s Threads just a week after its launch
  • While some admit Threads is better, others have shared how much they hate it 
  • Follow The Daily Mail on Threads

Many Twitter employees have flocked to rival app Threads in the aftermath of its record-breaking launch, a new report claims. 

This is despite heightened tensions between Twitter’s Elon Musk and his Meta rival Mark Zuckerberg.

One Twitter staffer even admitted Threads was ‘just better’, according to The Daily Beast, adding: ‘I’m going to get fired for this, but I work at Twitter right now and have never really used it. Here’s to a new world!’

Another user complimented the ease of Threads’ registration process, posting: ‘[Not gonna lie] the signup flow was really nice.’

But these employees are not the only ones, as the publication claims that nearly a quarter of a sample of 133 staffers have signed up to the ‘Twitter-killer app’.

Many Twitter employees have flocked to rival app Threads in the aftermath of its record-breaking launch, a new report claims 

READ MORE: Threads confirms it is working on a MAJOR update

Threads has confirmed that a major update will soon be available, less than a week after its record-breaking launch 

Musk’s workforce currently includes roughly 1,700 people, meaning it is possible that hundreds may have joined.

MailOnline also found that other former and current Twitter employees have used Threads to voice grievances against it or promote Musk’s platform.

Bruce Daisley, who previously worked as the Vice President of Twitter in Europe, the Middle East and Africa branded Threads ‘a mess of the hottest sort’.

He wrote: ‘I hope someone at Threads Towers has a busy day ahead doing computer stuff because this is a mess of the hottest sort right now.’

Follow The Daily Mail on Threads 

In a separate post he added: ‘Welcome to Threads. I already hate it.’

Meanwhile, Twitter software engineer Tom Blacknell wrote: ‘Everyone should check out Twitter.’

Dionne Grant, a partner manager at the firm also jokingly posted: ‘Research purposes and that,’ to which one user replied a winking GIF. 

News of this comes just days after Twitter threatened to file a lawsuit against Meta over its new ‘copycat’ Threads platform.

Bruce Daisley, who previously worked as the Vice President of Twitter in Europe, the Middle East and Africa branded Threads ‘a mess of the hottest sort’


MailOnline found that both former and current Twitter employees have used Threads to voice grievances or promote Musk’s platform

Meta has been accused of poaching former Twitter employees to create the Threads app in addition to using its rival’s ‘trade secrets’ 

In response, Meta Communications Director Andy Stone said that no ex-Twitter employees took part in the engineering side of Threads 

Meta has been accused of poaching former Twitter employees to create the Threads app in addition to using its rival’s ‘trade secrets’. 

In a letter released on Thursday, Twitter lawyer Alex Spriro wrote: ‘Twitter has serious concerns that Meta Platforms (Meta) has engaged in systematic, willful, and unlawful misappropriation of Twitter’s trade secrets and other intellectual property.

‘Twitter intends to strictly enforce its intellectual property rights, and demands that Meta take immediate steps to stop using any Twitter trade secrets or other highly confidential information.’

In a tweet referencing the letter, Musk later added: ‘Competition is fine, cheating is not.’

In response, Meta Communications Director Andy Stone said that no ex-Twitter employees took part in the engineering side of Threads.

He wrote: ‘No one on the Threads engineering team is a former Twitter employee – that’s just not a thing.’

Follow The Daily Mail on Threads 

TWITTER VS THREADS: HOW THE PLATFORMS COMPARE 

TWITTER

Owner: Elon Musk

Post length: 280 characters with a normal account or up to 25,000 with paid-for Twitter Blue

Photo: One to four in each tweet

Video: Up to two minutes and 20 seconds in length

Verification cost: $8.00/£9.60 on the web and $11.00/£11.00 on iOS and Android

Messaging: Yes

Hashtags: Yes

Trending posts: Yes

Account deletion: Users must enter a deactivation stage first which lasts 30 days. If the account is not accessed in this time window, it will be permanently deleted.

 

THREADS

Owner: Mark Zuckerberg

Post length: 500 characters

Photo:  Up to ten in a single thread

Video: Up to two minutes and 20 seconds in length

Verification cost: $11.99/£9.99 on the web and  $14.99/£11.99 on iOS and Android

Messaging: No

Hashtags: No

Trending posts: No

Account deletion: While a profile can be temporarily deactivated on the app, permanently deleting it requires sacrificing Instagram too. Instead, Instagram’s guidance suggests that ‘you can always delete individual posts’, set a profile as private or just block other users.

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