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Threads app get legal action threats from twitter | The Enterprise World
1. Twitter threatens legal action over Threads app
Regarding Meta’s quickly expanding rival program Threads, Twitter is considering
taking legal action against Meta.
The company behind Threads app, which was introduced to millions of people on
Wednesday, has positioned it as a “friendly” substitute for Twitter. Elon Musk of
Twitter claimed that “competition is fine, cheating is not,” but Meta refuted this
accusation in a legal letter, denying that any ex-Twitter employees were involved in
the creation of Threads app. According to Meta, more than 30 million users have
downloaded the new app.
Incredibly Familiar
According to James Clayton, a technology correspondent for BBC News, Threads has
a look and feel that is comparable to Twitter’s. The news stream and the reposting,
according to him, were “incredibly familiar.”
Twitter lawyer Alex Spiro wrote to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Wednesday,
charging Meta of “systematic, wilful, and unlawful misappropriation of Twitter’s
2. trade secrets and other intellectual property” in order to establish Threads, as
originally reported by the news source Semafor.
More specifically, Mr. Spiro said that Meta had hired a large number of ex-Twitter
workers who “had and continue to have access to Twitter’s trade secrets and other
highly confidential information” and who ultimately assisted Meta in creating what he
called the “copycat” Threads app program.
Twitter demands that Meta take immediate action to stop exploiting any Twitter trade
secrets or other highly private information and states that it will vigorously enforce its
intellectual property rights.
Competition is fine, Cheating is not
Twitter declares that it “reserves all rights, including but not limited to the right to
seek injunctive relief as well as civil remedies at any time.” After receiving a copy of
the letter, BBC News contacted Twitter and Meta for comments. In response to a
tweet that included the legal letter, Mr. Musk responded that “competition is fine,
cheating is not.” “No one on the Threads app engineering team is a former Twitter
employee – that’s just not a thing,” wrote Meta spokesperson Andy Stone in a thread.
Both Mr. Musk and Mr. Zuckerberg have recognized their rivalry over Threads app, a
connected but independent program that integrates with Instagram.
Zuckerberg broke his Twitter silence after more than 11 years to share a viral meme
of two virtually identical Spider-Man figurines pointing at each other in a standoff as
it launched in 100 countries.
It wasn’t long before Elon Musk said: “It is infinitely preferable to be attacked by
strangers on Twitter than indulge in the false happiness of hide-the-pain Instagram.”
This was while the word “Threads” was trending globally on his site. The network,
which was previously estimated to have roughly 260 million monthly users, is “often
imitated,” but it “can never be duplicated,” according to Twitter CEO Linda
Yaccarino.
Both Meta and Twitter have made big employee reductions this year; Meta said in
April that it will eliminate about 10,000 jobs. Following Mr. Musk’s takeover in
October, Twitter laid off as many as 80% of its 7,500 employees in waves of layoffs.