Instagram Threads’ launch has been an overnight success, topping 100 million users within days of its arrival. Now, new data indicates the app has already achieved one-fifth of the weekly active user base of Twitter worldwide and 86 times the weekly active user base of the largest Twitter rival in t...
and 86 times the weekly active user base of the largest Twitter rival in the U.S., Truth Social, which had a weekly active user base of 1 million as of last week.
First off, I do not like having this information. Secondly,
Still ahead for the app are larger improvements like a following feed
Imagine. A platform whose main functionality is and always has been content from followed users, but they consented to release without the follow button. I don't understand why that's anything but decimating to their usage. Even more confusing when you find there are already multiple avenues to buy bot followers, which may be what's happening in India. They could just be preparing their market (tagging @stopthatgirl7 so I don't have to split my train of thought into redundant comments)
I'd be very interested to know what Instagram's sign-ups look like. It's nothing to say that threads got X many users when doing that entails having an instagram. What's the split here? Has there been an increase in people making those for the purpose of Threads, or is this just existing users branching out towards every available opportunity? Because not doing that would only logically put them at a disadvantage if their goal is visibility.
I’m not surprised it’s so popular, but I’ll admit to being surprised it’s so popular in India and Brazil. Is Instagram really popular in those countries, or is it something else?
Facebook was subsidising the internet access? (search "internet.org" for why it's controversial - when Facebook went offline people couldn't even access government services or health services)
It’s interesting that India and Brazil seem so alike adopting technologies. The same happened with Orkut. India and Brazil dominated.
Instagram is popular in Brazil (people even shortened to Insta) but I don’t think it’s any more popular than in the US, for example. But WhatsApp is THE communication app of choice (they also shortened it to Zap). It’s so strong that companies have based their point of access on WhatsApp. I’ve seen hotels with several employees sitting before computers with WhatsApp web interface open doing everything, from contacting clients to cab companies.
So, I wouldn’t be surprised if Brazil adopted Threads.
Everyone shortens it to insta, Facebook gets shortened to fb or face, youtube to yt or tube. Very few websites don't get shortened, and those are usually the ones with short names, sometimes even monosyllabic names. Twitch, you can't shorten that (at least no in any reasonable way), tiktok, and so on.
The rest of your comment stands, I just took umbrage with your implication that Brazil is somehow different in shortening names of apps and platforms. They might do it more often than others, but they're not unique or special just for doing it.
Perhaps asking in a wefwef community/magazine would be more productive if you really want an answer. Otherwise, it seems like you’re just passively-aggressively complaining about seeing something because you personally aren’t interested. Those of us commenting and upvoting, however, are.