Nelson Mail

Twitter tests disappeari­ng stories

- Kurt Wagner

Twitter is testing a way for users to post photos and videos that disappear after 24 hours – similar to that offered on rival social networks – in a push to encourage people to share more often on its service.

The San Francisco-based company calls these disappeari­ng posts Fleets – short for fleeting tweets – and wants the tool to ease the pressure of online sharing. Similar to tweets, Fleets are textfirst but videos, GIFs and photos can be added.

‘‘Some of you tell us that you’re uncomforta­ble to Tweet because Tweets are public, feel permanent, and have public counts,’’ Twitter wrote in a blog post on Wednesday.

‘‘We hope that people who don’t usually feel comfortabl­e Tweeting use Fleets to share musings about what’s on their mind.’’

The test is only available in Brazil.

Chief executive Jack Dorsey is under threat from activist investment firm Elliott Management Group, which wants to push him out of the top job. Dorsey has two jobs – he also runs payments company Square – and Elliott thinks Twitter needs a fulltime chief executive.

Twitter has also developed a reputation for moving slowly when

‘‘We hope that people who don’t usually feel comfortabl­e Tweeting use Fleets to share musings about what’s on their mind.’’

Twitter

it comes to launching new products and features.

It’s common for some ideas to percolate internally for years before they ever appear to Twitter users, a much slower cadence than other social media companies. Even expanding the length of tweets from 140 to 280 characters took years of debate and discussion inside the company.

The Fleets test provides at least the perception that Twitter is moving forward.

Disappeari­ng posts have become a popular way to share on competing social sites, including Facebook’s Instagram and Snap’s Snapchat.

More than 500 million people use Instagram’s version of Stories, and Facebook executives have pointed to this as an important growth opportunit­y for the company’s advertisin­g business. Instagram’s Stories feature already makes up about 10 per cent of all ad spending on Facebook properties.

It’s too soon to say whether

Fleets will provide a similar opportunit­y for Twitter.

The company has started testing features in public in recent years, often asking for user feedback before rolling something out more broadly.

It’s one of the ways Twitter tries to be more thoughtful about what it launches, but also slows down the process.

Instagram, by comparison, unveiled its version of Stories to all global users at the same time in 2016. –

 ??  ?? Twitter wants the disappeari­ng posts tool to ease the pressure of online sharing.
Twitter wants the disappeari­ng posts tool to ease the pressure of online sharing.
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