Post News, a Twitter alternative that emerged in the wake of Elon Musk’s takeover, is shutting down. Noam Bardin, the platform’s founder and former CEO of Waze, writes that Post News “is not growing fast enough to become a real business or a significant platform.”

The Andreessen Horowitz-backed platform launched in a closed beta in November 2022, but now it’s set to shutter “within the next few weeks.” It serves as a social platform that also offers users ad-free access to paywalled content from publishers such as Fortune, Business Insider, Wired, The Boston Globe, and others. All users have to do is pay a “few cents” per article instead of signing up for a subscription to each publication.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    I have literally never heard of this platform. It just goes to show how successful it was. At this point, unless you are joining the fediverse, you are probably going to fail. Even nostr has fedi crossposters.

    • @iopq
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      57 months ago

      Nostr is a curious case, because the organization is superior to the Fediverse.

      I have already lost two accounts due to servers shutting down so I moved fully to lemmy.world

      This means there’s a reason to centralize since other servers can go offline without telling you. No way to move your data if you don’t know that you needed to.

      If a Nostr relay shuts down I wouldn’t even know about it

      • @[email protected]
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        37 months ago

        That is definately true. Fedi makes the centralization aspect slightly better while nostr completely eliminates it. I use both because I like the reddit style interface of Lemmy and Nostr doesn’t have anything like that. So far as I have seen all the nostr clients are Twitter like clients just like messed it on but that interface doesn’t work as well for me

    • 乇ㄥ乇¢ㄒ尺ㄖ
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      217 months ago

      Exactly… 🤣… Been looking for Social media alternatives for years and never heard of this one before…

      • @[email protected]OP
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        147 months ago

        I’ve never used post and I haven’t heard anyone talk about them in a long time but they were pushed as a big deal after Musk bought Twitter. Kara Swisher and a lot of rich tech bros were trying to convince everyone they were the Next Big Thing around the time of the big wave of migrations to Mastodon.

          • @[email protected]OP
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            47 months ago

            And it wasn’t announced until pretty late that she was. She was teasing it on her podcast like ‘stay tuned, I know serious people with money who are ready to launch something big’

        • @[email protected]
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          47 months ago

          Yes, and where is mastodon now? And where is post now? And we see which one was the big deal.

      • maegul (he/they)
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        127 months ago

        AFAIU, it was an attempt to be purely dedicated to the sorta mainstream centrist political and news and journalism parts of Twitter, which seems to me to make the egotistical mistake of thinking that they’re the ones that made Twitter when it was likely the other way around and they were the ones getting in on the “party” after it “started”.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    47 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The Andreessen Horowitz-backed platform launched in a closed beta in November 2022, but now it’s set to shutter “within the next few weeks.” It serves as a social platform that also offers users ad-free access to paywalled content from publishers such as Fortune, Business Insider, Wired, The Boston Globe, and others.

    The platform eventually rolled out a mobile app and later launched a real-time notification system, with plans for more features in the future.

    “We built a toxicity-free community, a platform where Publishers engage, and an app that validated many theories around Micropayments and consumers’ willingness to purchase individual articles,” Bardin writes.

    Post News isn’t the only Twitter alternative that struggled to find an audience, as another potential rival, Pebble, shut down in November 2023.

    But several Twitter alternatives are still standing — and all of them are part of the fediverse, which means they’re open to sharing their content with other social platforms.

    The decentralized platforms Mastodon and Bluesky are still going strong, while Meta’s Threads launched its fediverse beta in March and added Taylor Swift to its user base.


    The original article contains 336 words, the summary contains 181 words. Saved 46%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @[email protected]
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    37 months ago

    Funny because I only know this company through a LinkedIn posting they had up last month. It explains why they never contacted me I guess.

  • @Windhover
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    27 months ago

    I tried it, and can’t remember why I removed it. I think it wasn’t straight forward to read articles, and it wasn’t really clear how the user can control the micropayments.

    Journalists won’t accept this but it was also a test of the degree to which they’re the center of the conversation in this media space.

    • @RGB3x3
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      27 months ago

      What it should have been is exclude the social media crap, create a browser extension that charges users and allows them to get through the paywalls, then it pays the journals.

      Using a separate app makes the whole thing more of a hindrance than convenience. I want to be able to click on an article posted anywhere, load it in my mobile browser, and seamlessly get charged a couple cents to read the article.

  • ArugulaZ
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    17 months ago

    Sounds like Cohost is circling the bowl, too. And what happened to that social network started by two teenage girls? There were so many of these damn things I couldn’t keep track of it all. It was like the web search industry before the Google meteor struck.