Skip to main content

X / Twitter use is down by nearly a quarter since the Musk Era started, report says

X mobile app logo

An uptick in bots, a rise in hate speech, and content moderation policies that are unevenly applied to the social media platform's users.

These are just some of the issues that have plagued X, formerly known as Twitter, since Elon Musk acquired the company back in October 2022.

Now, roughly a year and a half later, it appears that Musk's X has lost almost a quarter of its user base.

According to new data from third-party mobile analytics firm Sensor Tower, X's number of daily active mobile app users in the U.S. has fallen by 23 percent since November 2022. That would be the first full month in which X operated under Musk. 

When looking at year-over-year data, mobile app users in the U.S. are down 18 percent from just one year ago.

As of last month, there were 27 million daily active users on X's mobile app in the U.S.

X on the decline?

According to Sensor Tower's research, as first reported by NBC News, X had "the most material decline in active users compared to its peers."

And the contrast between X's social media competitors is stark.

Next to Musk's X, the platform that has faced the biggest decline in users based on mobile app data from Sensor Tower, is TikTok. The viral short form social video app use base declined by 9.5 percent since Nov. 2022. Instagram fell nearly 4.5 percent, Snapchat declined by nearly 2 percent, and Facebook was down by less than one percent.

"This decline in X mobile app active users may have been driven by user frustration over flagrant content, general platform technical issues, and the growing threat of short-form video platforms," Sensor Tower said in its research.

The most abrupt decline in X usage seems to have occurred over last Summer. In a two month span, Musk heralded two of the platform's biggest changes: Musk kicked off July 2023 by rate limiting then-Twitter's users, capping how many times they can reload their Twitter feed and limiting how many tweets they can view in a day. Then, in August 2023, Musk started to rid the platform of its Twitter brand, dropping the iconic bird logo as well as the name "Twitter" and replacing it with "X."  At the time, researchers noticed that X's App Store downloads were immediately negatively affected by the name change. 

By September of last year, X had already lost more than 17 percent of its mobile app users in the U.S. according to Sensor Tower.

X disputes the findings but doesn't prove much

Musk's platform has addressed Sensor Tower's findings and the NBC News report via a public statement posted by an official X account, @XData.

X says that the report "incorrectly claims that fewer people are using X today than previously."

The statement continues by pointing out that the report is "based solely on estimates from @SensorTower, which does not have access to the actual data from these platforms and does not include mobile."

Mashable must note that Sensor Tower's estimates are based solely on mobile user data via the platform's official app, so it does include mobile estimates. X might be trying to refer to mobile web usage through a mobile web browser, which Sensor Tower does not account for.

The statement from X concluded with a "too long; didn't read it" summary: "tl/dr: Both our own data and self-reported data from other platforms tells a different story."

X did not provide any data or evidence to refute the report or back up its claims.

In an unrelated post published before the Sensor Tower report, the @XData account claimed that X had "250 million people use X every day" and "550 million people visit the global town square every month."

However, based on data Musk posted to his account shortly after his takeover of the company in Nov. 2022, X was pulling in close to 260 million daily active users at the end of that month. If the recent stats posted by the @XData account are representative of X's daily active users, then this would indeed prove that there has been a decline in users on X. 



from Mashable https://ift.tt/KJ7iDWR
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Instagram accidentally reinstated Pornhub’s banned account

After years of on-and-off temporary suspensions, Instagram permanently banned Pornhub’s account in September. Then, for a short period of time this weekend, the account was reinstated. By Tuesday, it was permanently banned again. “This was done in error,” an Instagram spokesperson told TechCrunch. “As we’ve said previously, we permanently disabled this Instagram account for repeatedly violating our policies.” Instagram’s content guidelines prohibit  nudity and sexual solicitation . A Pornhub spokesperson told TechCrunch, though, that they believe the adult streaming platform’s account did not violate any guidelines. Instagram has not commented on the exact reasoning for the ban, or which policies the account violated. It’s worrying from a moderation perspective if a permanently banned Instagram account can accidentally get switched back on. Pornhub told TechCrunch that its account even received a notice from Instagram, stating that its ban had been a mistake (that message itse...

The Nintendo Switch has been the US’s bestselling console for 23 straight months

Photo by James Bareham / The Verge It’s been a good two years for the Nintendo Switch. According to Nintendo, the gaming tablet has been the bestselling console in the US for 23 straight months. And according to data from the NPD Group, it just had its best October ever, moving 735,926 units of both the Switch and Switch Lite in the US. The company says that represents a 136 percent increase compared to last year. To date, the Switch has sold 22.5 million units in the US, and last week Nintendo revealed that more than 68 million units have been sold globally . “We’re excited about our momentum,” says Nick Chavez, Nintendo of America’s SVP of sales and marketing. Chavez puts the company’s big October down to two main factors. One is a better supply of stock; this year in particular, it’s often been hard to find a Switch on store shelves. This has only been exacerbated by increased demand due to a combination of the pandemic and the breakout success of Animal Crossing: New Horizons . ...

Richard Branson is renting out his private estate on his second Caribbean island for the first time at $25,000 a night. Take a look inside the 3-villa compound.

The Branson Estate. Virgin Limited Edition Richard Branson's private Caribbean island, Moskito Island, is opening to the public for the first time. Guests can rent Branson's entire personal estate - which can house 22 guests in three villas - starting at $25,000 per night. It's just 2.5 miles from his other private island, Necker Island. See more stories on Insider's business page . Richard Branson, billionaire business magnate and Virgin Group founder, is opening up his private estate on his second Caribbean island to the public for the first time. Richard Branson in Australia in November 2019. Getty Images/Don Arnold/WireImage Branson, who's worth $4.9 billion and whose businesses ventures span airlines, luxury travel, space travel, telecom, and more, bought Moskito Island for a reported $10 million in 2007. Moskito Island is not to be confused with Branson's  other private Caribbean island, Necker Island, which Branson bought in 1978 and wh...