Twitter X Communities start to look more like Facebook Groups with new member vetting feature
Facebook Groups offers a similar questions feature, though it’s much more robust. On Facebook, admins can require users to answer multiple questions before being able to join and also insist they agree to their group’s own specific set rules. Some groups even quiz prospective members on what the rules state to ensure they have read them.
Though anyone can make a Facebook Group, building and running Communities on X is a feature that’s limited to X Premium subscribers as only “verified” users can create a Community. Verification, of course, is the flagship feature of X’s paid subscription. Joining Communities, however, is open to all X users. That’s led to some of the larger groups having sizable user bases. For example, the Apple Community has 52,500 members, Tech Twitter has 29,500 members, The Design Sphere has 117,000 members, and Movie Twitter has 119,600 members, to name a few of the larger groups. Still, broader adoption of the feature may be limited by the fact that not everyone can make a Community of their own.
It’s interesting to note that Communities have not been among the numerous features that got the chopping block under Elon Musk’s ownership. Since the Tesla and SpaceX exec took over Twitter/X, he’s axed quite a few features and services, including its newsletter platform Revue, support for ad-free news articles, support for third-party clients, and its private Circle feature for sharing with friends. It also stuck TweetDeck (now called XPro) behind a paywall and raised the prices to access its developer API.
Communities today feel like an underdeveloped feature that doesn’t quite fit into the fast-flowing timeline on X, offering a quieter and more isolated space to post about a topic or theme. It’s not clear what larger vision X has in store for its groups feature or if they’ll ever become a more prominent part of X’s service, or how.
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