Threads is adding Live Chats to boost real-time engagement
Live Chats are launching first within the NBA Threads community during the Playoffs.
The company told TechCrunch via email that it’s initially rolling out the feature to a small group of creators.
Users can send messages, photos, videos, links, and emoji reactions.
Up to 150 participants can actively send messages in a chat.
When Threads first launched, it lagged behind X when it came to relevance and timeliness; it was harder to follow what was currently happening in the world.
Over time, Threads has built out its platform with these tools, and now it’s looking to better compete with X through the addition of a feature that even the Elon Musk-owned app doesn’t have, one specifically designed for real-time engagement. “It’s a new way to build community with others around shared interests like an album drop or a big game as it unfolds,” Meta explained in the blog post.
” Users can join Live Chats from the top of a Community feed, through a shared post in their main feed, or by tapping the red live ring around a host’s profile photo.
Additionally, hosts have real-time moderation controls and can demote users to spectator mode or remove them from the chat. As for the future, Meta says it is going to update Live Chats with several new features, including co-hosting, real-time play-by-play updates, lock-screen widgets that highlight live chat activity, and the ability to quote and share chat messages directly to Threads feeds. While Meta noted that the feature could also be used for things like album drops, there’s potential for Live Chats to be used in numerous other settings — such as the upcoming FIFA World Cup games, awards shows, TV show finales, and more
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