Facebook announced Monday it is developing a series of ‘social audio’ products to compete against rivals such as Twitter and popular new chatroom app Clubhouse.
The new features include ‘soundbites’ that lets users share voice recordings to newsfeed that others can ‘flip through in an infinite scroll’ like videos in Instagram Reels.
However, it may be the confirmation of a Clubhouse copycat that users have been waiting for, which is set to roll out as an audio-only version of Rooms this summer.
Clubhouse is an audio-chat social media platform available by invite-only and Zuckerberg made a surprise appearance during a segment that tech watchers believed was his way of infiltrating the app.
Facebook announced Monday it is developing a series of ‘social audio’ products to compete against rivals such as Twitter and the newly-popular Clubhouse. The new features include ‘soundbites’ that lets users share voice recordings to newsfeed that others can ‘flip through in an infinite scroll’ like videos in Instagram Reels
According to Bloomberg, the audio-only rooms can be saved, allowing other users to download segments as podcasts.
And Facebook’s artificial intelligence (AI) will soon be taught how to recommend specific discussions to users based on their likes and interests.
Along with copying Clubhouse’s platform, Facebook will also let users pay speakers with tips during discussions.
As well as targeting Twitter and Clubhouse, Facebook also appears to have set Apple in its sights by offering users podcasts that can be downloaded and listened to directly in its main app.
Mark Zuckerberg (pictured) is scheduled to speak with technology journalist Casey Newton at 1pm ET about the new products
However, Bloomberg notes that many of these products are still weeks or even months away from launching.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in an audio interview with tech journalist Casey Newton on group chatting app Discord: ‘We think that audio is of course also going to be a first class medium and there are all these different products to be built across the whole spectrum.’
News of Facebook’s Clubhouse competitor surfaced in February from The New York Times, which shared information from people familiar with the matter.
These sources said Zuckerberg has long been interested in audio communication forms, but Fireside is still in ‘its earliest stages of development.’
Emilie Haskell, a Facebook spokeswoman, told the new source: ‘We’ve been connecting people through audio and video technologies for many years and are always exploring new ways to improve that experience for people.’
Vox revealed plans of Facebook’s ‘social audio’ products Sunday, which included the podcast and soundbites features, along with plans for the unnamed Clubhouse competitor.
Clubhouse is an audio-chat social media platform available by invite-only and Zuckerberg made a surprise appearance during a segment that many said was his way of infiltrating the app – and those ideas could soon be confirmed.
It would also be a feature that could be valuable to those with vision issues, allowing them a new way of experiencing the social media site.
The podcast discovery product is said to connect with Spotify, with that podcasting and streaming service itself said to be working on its own version a Clubhouse copycat.
Clubhouse has made waves in the social media world and in just a matter of months.
It has hosted a number of big names such as Drake, Kevin Hart and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk.
Zuckerberg appeared in ‘The Good Time Show’ in February to discuss the future of virtually and augmented reality, but listeners of the discussion speculated that it was a reconnaissance mission for his own company.
Moments after news spread the Zuckerberg made a surprise appearance on Clubhouse, Twitter was filled with conversations about the CEO’s motives.
Moments after news spread the Zuckerberg made a surprise appearance on Clubhouse, Twitter was filled with conversations about the CEO’s motives.
One user called ‘Amy’ thinks the CEO could make his own spin off of ‘audio rooms’ that would be available on Facebook, WhatsApp and Messenger
Sal Rodriguez shared a tweet that reads: ‘Listening to Mark Zuckerberg chat on Clubhouse, it’s impossible not to wonder how long before Facebook releases its own version of this product.’
One user called ‘Amy’ thinks the CEO could make his own spin off of ‘audio rooms’ that would be available on Facebook, WhatsApp and Messenger.
Facebook has been branded the king of copycats among the social media world.
The reputation stems from its first attack on Snapchat in 2017 when it added Stories to Instagram.
However, the move seems to have paid off as the feature has more than 500 million daily active users while Snap says it has about 238 million, as reported on by the Washington Post in August 2020.
Its latest offence, also a feature in Instagram, pulls imitates video sharing app TikTok.
Facebook launched Reels last year that offers short-form video editing tools that lets users be creative with 30-second video clips with captions and music.
TikTok’s entire model makes the same features available, but extends the clip time to 60 seconds.