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31/05/2024After testing its new Tweetdeck-style UI for Threads on desktop over the past few weeks, Meta has announced the global rollout of the new threads.net on desktop. This update offers more customization and monitoring options for Threads users.

As demonstrated in the above image posted by Instagram chief Adam Mosseri, the new Threads desktop UI allows you to create custom streams of Threads updates, on whatever topics you choose, which can then be displayed in a single workspace, alongside your “Following” and “For you” feeds.
The new UI, also allows you to add dedicated columns for your favorite searches, tags, and accounts, as well as your saved posts, and notifications. You can even turn on “Auto-update” on any column, which will then see new content appear in real-time (you can see this in the third column in the preview image above). In addition, the Threads team is also working on an update that will enable you to easily drag and drop your columns in the display to update their placement.
This update enhances Threads as a news-gathering and monitoring tool, empowering brand managers to track relevant discussions and key profiles. It could also make Threads more valuable for real-time news engagement. While Threads has been cautious about real-time feeds due to concerns about spam and misinformation, recent updates, including this new Threads desktop UI and the “Recent” sorting option in search results, indicate a shift towards facilitating real-time discussions.
Thus far, however, the Threads team has been somewhat resistant to real-time feeds, due to concerns that they could end up filled with spammers, while also facilitating the spread of misinformation and angst.
But it is coming around, both with this new Threads desktop UI, and the addition of a “Recent” sorting option in search results earlier this month.
More specifically, while Meta wants to take a different approach with Threads than the path that saw Twitter become a hive of spam and division, real-time, topical discussion is critical, so it needs to better facilitate such to capitalize on its opportunity.
Which Threads is seemingly now realizing, with Mosseri also further clarifying his anti-news stance in the app earlier this week:
https://www.threads.net/@mosseri/post/C7ZcKpCRPhE
Mosseri further explained that its efforts to limit the spread of political content “work primarily at the account level, not the post level,” which is an important distinction as well. That effectively means that users who post about politics every now and then will not be impacted by any reach penalty as a result of such, but profiles that constantly share and re-share political posts will see less reach.
Mosseri stated further:“We’re not anti-news, we’re just not looking to amplify political news. If you follow many political accounts, the ranking of posts from those accounts won’t be affected by any of this.”
While the Threads algorithm actively decreases the exposure of accounts frequently posting about politics, typically engagement-baiting influencers aiming to stimulate comments and discussion, individual political posts remain unaffected. Moreover, posts from profiles users choose to follow will continue to appear in their “For You” feed.
Adam Mosseri faces a challenging task in explaining this balance transparently. Revealing all measures to limit political content’s reach could provide a playbook for engagement baiters. Threads aims to restrain extensive political discourse by diminishing the reach of accounts predominantly focused on politics. However, sporadic political postings are permissible.
Observing the practical impact of these measures will be intriguing. Nonetheless, Threads appears to be gradually solidifying its position within the broader social media realm, with such tools bolstering its utility over time.
Source: Social Media Today
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