South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)
Twitter’s new offering: ‘Fleets’ that disappear after 24 hours
SAN FRANCISCO — First Snapchat did it. Then Instagram and Facebook jumped in. Now Twitter is joining in. too.
Twitter said it would introduce a feature called Fleets, allowing users to post ephemeral photos or text that will automatically disappear after 24 hours.
Fleets, a name that refers to the “fleeting” nature of a thought or expression, will roll out to all iPhone and Android users globally over the coming days, the company said.
Fleets can’t be retweeted and they won’t have “likes.”
People can respond to them, but the replies show up as direct messages to the original tweeter, not as a public response, turning any back-and-forth into a private conversation.
Twitter said Tuesday that its main “global town square” service, which people such as President Donald Trump use to broadcast their thoughts to followers, remained its marquee product.
But the company said it recognized that many users simply lurked on the platform and rarely posted. Fleets, it said, could make it easier for people to communicate without worrying about wider scrutiny of their posts.
“We’ve learned that some people feel more comfortable joining conversations on Twitter with this ephemeral format, so what they’re saying lives just for a moment in time,” said Joshua Harris, a Twitter director of design. “We can create a space with less pressure that allows people to express themselves in a way that feels a bit more safe.”
Twitter’s move is part of a larger shift by social media companies toward more private and temporary modes of sharing. As public sharing on social media has spread toxic content and misinformation, many people have looked to minimize their digital footprints and communicate in more intimate groups.
Fleets are a “lower pressure” way to communicate “fleeting thoughts” as opposed to permanent tweets, Harris and Sam Haves on, product manager, said in a blog post.
Ephemeral sharing was pioneered by Snapchat.
Evan Spiegel, chief executive of Snap, Snapchat’s parent company, has said he noticed that young people wished to keep their photos and communications private and temporary when he founded his company in 2011.
Snapchat’s Stories feature, which broadcasts someone’s posts to his or her followers before disappearing 24 hours later, has become popular.
Snapchat’s competitors have taken note.
Facebook and its family of apps, including the photo-sharing site Instagram and the Whats App messaging app, have replicated the feature in recent years. Others, such as LinkedIn and Pinterest, have also followed suit.
Twitter has been late to the trend, partly because of the public nature of its platform. It is also more difficult to create advertising for ephemeral posts than for more permanent content, another hurdle to building the product.
In tests of Fleets in Brazil, Italy, India and South Korea, users gravitated to the new feature, Twitter executives said.
“Those new to Twitter found Fleets to be an easier way to share what’s on their mind,” Harris said.
Smaller tech companies have also worked on innovating alternate forms of communication over the past few years.
Disco rd, a popular communications startup among gamers and others, has popularized group chat rooms that use video, voice or text chat. Clubhouse, another startup, has pushed an all-audio, allephemeral social chat room approach.
Twitter said it was also experimenting with audio forms of communication among users.
One of those products, called Spaces, looks and acts similar to Clubhouse, with small groups of people able to speak privately with no permanent recording of the conversation. Spaces is still in its early stages, the company said.