🧵 Making sense of Threads

🧵 Making sense of Threads

Threads is live! 

Please join me there

It will probably be the fastest-growing consumer service to 100m users in history, faster even than ChatGPT, securing 30m signups in just two days.

Twitter is broken. I’ve used it for 16 years; I built a company on it. And for years, I used it as a source of professional information, often supplemented by third-party tools like Prismatic, RightRelevance and Nuzzle. In its early years (till about 2013), Twitter suffered from noise pollution: scams, tweet circles, retweet to win, and the rest. It was one reason why PeerIndex existed and why, in 2011, we launched a bot-or-not detector for Twitter. 

Twitter’s investment in trust, safety and community health dealt with much of that. What it couldn’t handle was the culture war, Trump and Brexit. In the period after 2016, the social and algorithmic filters I had set up over years become largely useless.

The second breaking of Twitter has been Musk. I’m like Justice Potter Stewart, evaluating why Twitter is broken and getting worse. 

But it is definitely worse for me. Every interaction yields less interesting material. Specialist discussion tapers off more quickly. The ‘For You’ feed is a crapshoot. My lists, curated over the years, are lower quality, lower velocity than in ages. True, AI discussion is significant (although polarised) but many of the other topics I followed (and people too) have disappeared or become full of verbiage, grandstanders and trolls. 

We haven’t seen the bottom yet. I’m not convinced that Musk can improve Twitter. But we shouldn’t count him out. And for all its weaknesses, it doesn’t really have competitors as a news backplane. So I’m still using it regularly and have become unseemingly generous with the block button.

A new thread

But Threads might be a replacement. Perhaps. Maybe. 

The complexity of any social network is, of course, the network. Migrating 16 years of a social graph is probably impossible. (Which is why I’d like you to follow me on Threads).

Starting from scratch, as Mastodon and BlueSky, have done will be tricky. Ultimately, the move to Mastodon or BlueSky worsens your user experience. With the exception of a few communities, there aren’t many people there. And my reason for using Twitter (and, by extension, any competitor) is to understand what people (including practitioners and experts) in specific domains are thinking. I’m boring. Not really there for the lulz, more for the learning.

I still get more material from Twitter than I do from those platforms. 

The reasons to move to BlueSky or Masto’ are not so much about short-term needs. They are long-term: decentralised social networks are more self-sovereign than centralised ones. Over the years, it’ll be better if we supported federated social media more than mercurially-owned corporate versions. But the immediate experience is worse. I can’t find the experts or communities of practice I used to follow. More complex apps and sign-on flows don’t help. 

Could Threads address this? It will bootstrap from the Instagram network. This means potentially hundreds of millions of people easily switching to the app. Threads could quickly have more monthly active users than Twitter. 

But… that doesn’t mean it’s replaced the Twitter of old, the Twitter of smart conversation (yes, in a sea of other material). 

The problem is that people don’t have unitary social graphs. My Twitter graph differs greatly from my Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn ones. We knew this from the very early days of PeerIndex (we cross-indexed multiple social networks and could evaluate the differences in graphs and graph structure by app.) 

Not only are graphs different, but people’s behaviours are different. My Instagram feed only has about 4,000 followers (many of whom think I am a villainous minor Bollywood actor), compared to a Twitter following of 43,000 and LinkedIn of more than half-a-million. Each one of those graphs exhibits very different behaviours. I follow a couple of thousand people on Twitter and track some 10-15 lists (of about 100 users each). The cost of moving that over to Threads will be extremely high. 

Since the graph is the collective sensing network that delivers the material who is in the graph and how they behave will determine your user experience. 

Brute force

Threads has a brute force bootstrap. It’ll pour your Instagram network into your Threads one.

This might overcome the cold start problem. But it isn’t clear it solves to community start problem: that is that our social graphs reflect particular communities of practice or relationships in which we participate. Put it this way: you might love a big family gathering at Christmas… when it’s your family. But teleported into someone’s random family gathering is just a bit weird.

For Threads to become a realistic competitor (in terms of time and attention), it’ll need to help us with that graph problem. Yes, product features, like lists and hashtags, will be essential. But ultimately, social networks are about networks. For non-Twitter users, those who struggled to build the right graph in Twitter, Threads might appeal… for someone like me, where there is minimal congruency between my Instagram and Twitter graphs, it is more of an issue.

The fresh air of competition

But the most exciting thing about Threads is that it’s actually a genuine bit of entrepreneurialism from Facebook. Look at Zuckerberg’s double pivot this year. The metaverse - tens of billions of sunk costs for legless avatars and empty virtual worlds - dumped for a constant flow of AI projects and now a scrappy, yet polished, new app.

Threas may prompt better behaviour from Twitter. It might even encourage other firms to figure out how they might nibble at social-network-infused products. Apple would be an obvious one: it can tie users back to real verified IDs, it has a business model that doesn’t depend on attention or advertising, and Cupertino often sees its products in social contexts. The firm has failed twice before with community apps:eWorld and Ping were both lead balloons. But little-by-little social network capabilities are appearing on their platforms.

In the small part of the world that is consumer internet apps, that is pretty exciting. Big successful companies are not renowned for trying things like this. So I’m happy that Meta did.

It is, after all, harder for an incumbent to innovate than for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle.

Cheers,

Azeem

(Follow me on Threads here.)


You've brilliantly captured the dynamic nature of social media and the implications of the current potential shift. Thank you, very insightful!

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Thanks for the post Azeem Azhar . Just to let you know that following your link leads to a page with no follow button. I need to search your name to be able to follow you. Thanks

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Given the invasive nature of the personal data collection, I'm surprised the trade-offs are worth it to you.

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