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WT Social

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wikitribune Social
Type of site
News, social networking service
Available inMultilingual
FoundedOctober 2019; 5 years ago (2019-10)
HeadquartersLondon, United Kingdom
Area servedWorldwide
Founder(s)
IndustrySocial networking service
URLwww.trustcafe.io Edit this at Wikidata
CommercialYes (funded by members)
RegistrationRequired (gratis)
Users
  • 450,000 users
LaunchedOctober 2019; 5 years ago (2019-10)
Current statusActive
Content license
Proprietary license

WT.Social, also known as WikiTribune Social, WT or Trust Café, is a microblogging and social networking service on which users contribute to "subwikis". It was founded in October 2019 by Wikipedia cofounder Jimmy Wales as an alternative to Facebook and Twitter.[1] The service contains no advertisements and runs on donations. On launch it gained 400,000 registered users by December 3, 2019. Member growth was less rapid thereafter; the site had 508,980 users on November 5, 2022. In 2023 a beta for a successor version was launched, branded "Trust Café".

Creation and launch

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Jimmy Wales created WT.Social (originally formatted as "WT:Social") after becoming frustrated with Facebook and Twitter for what he called their "clickbait nonsense". The format is meant to combat fake news by providing evidence-based news with links and clear sources. Users are able to edit and flag misleading links.[2] WT.Social allows users to share links to news-sites with other users in "subwikis". Unlike its predecessor (WikiTribune, which Wales co-founded with Orit Kopel),[1] WT.Social was not crowdfunded.[3] Wales was quoted as wanting to "keep a tight rein on the costs".[3] In October 2019, Wales launched the site. When a new user signed up they would be placed on a waiting list with thousands of others. To skip the list and gain access to the site, users either had to make a donation or share a link with friends.[4] By November 6, the site had 25,000 users.[3] That number was claimed to be 200,000 by mid-November[2] and 400,000 by December 3.[5] However, this rapid growth was not sustained; the number of users reported as of November 5, 2022 was 508,980.[6]

Subsequent development

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Quoted in the Stanford Social Innovation Review for Summer 2020, Wales said: "We're not doing a good job of actually exposing the best stuff on the platform. So that's kind of our next phase in evolution."[7] This approach involved highlighting contributions by public figures.[7]

In 2023, WT.Social launched WTS2 beta, a remake of WT.Social, which Wales said would become the defacto software for WT.Social. It is currently in beta and Wales attributed the lack of posts and activity on WT.Social's main platform due to users migrating to the new software.[8][9] By July 2023 WTS2 beta had been branded "Trust Café", and was seen by a Tages Anzeiger journalist as of interest to people leaving Twitter, although more like Reddit in function, and as being set up as a community.[10] During a short broadcast interview in September 2023, Wales referred to Trust Café as a "small pilot project" in which "the idea is to replace social networks that really feed on attention, and likes and shares and all that and instead, the votes of trustworthiness based by trustworthy members of our community".[11]

Software

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As of launch, WT.Social runs on proprietary software.[12] However, as of November 7, 2019, Wales stated that he had just learnt about ActivityPub and was looking into it.[13] Later, Wales stated that the code would be released under GPLv3 in the future.[12]

References

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  1. ^ a b Bradshaw, Tim (November 13, 2019). "Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales launches Twitter and Facebook rival". Financial Times.
  2. ^ a b "Wikipedia founder's Facebook rival passes 200,000 users". The Independent. November 19, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c "Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales Launches Social Network to Compete With Facebook". CBS SF Bay Area. November 16, 2019.
  4. ^ "Wikipedia co-founder wants to give you an alternative to Facebook and Twitter". Engadget. November 14, 2019.
  5. ^ "WT.Social hit 400K members today!". WT.Community. December 3, 2019.
  6. ^ "508,980 Members on WT.Social". WT.Community. November 5, 2022. Archived from the original on February 8, 2021.
  7. ^ a b Bendix, Bendix (Summer 2020). "The People's Platform". Stanford Social Innovation Review. Retrieved July 30, 2020.
  8. ^ "Roadmap of Features". wts2.wt.social. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
  9. ^ "The silence of WTS is becoming deafening..." WT.Social. April 11, 2023. Retrieved May 12, 2023. Jimmy Wales, "The activity is starting to migrate to wts2, the new software that will be moved here when we're ready. Please everyone hop over there and say hi, ask questions. I respond to every post lately! I need people to test!"
  10. ^ "Meta lanciert neue App – Das sind die besten Twitter-Alternativen". Tages-Anzeiger (in German). July 4, 2023. Retrieved July 15, 2023.
  11. ^ "Wikipedia co-founder reveals new 'trustworthy' social media platform Trust Cafe". LBC. Retrieved June 20, 2024.
  12. ^ a b "Twitter statement". November 21, 2019. I have decided to freely license the code for wt.social
  13. ^ "Twitter thread". November 7, 2019. Sounds interesting. Reading! Not likely to do anything like this soon as we are underfunded and just getting going. But it sounds interesting! [...] Ok. I am always interested in decentralization as a principle. I don't know of anything I could actually use in this case though. [...] Also, to be clear, I'm not being dismissive. I'm reading up on ActivityPub to see if there's a way to support it natively. If real tools are being built that I can interoperate with, that's a clear win all around.
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