Facebookhas unleashed another threat to the future of Clubhouse.
The social media giant on Monday started rolling out Clubhouse-clone Live Audio Rooms, continuing the company tradition ofripping off competitors.
Like Clubhouse, Live Audio Rooms lets users listen to and join live conversations. Initially, only public figures and select Facebook Groups on iOS in the US will be able to create Live Audio Rooms, but users on both Android and iOS will be able to join them.
Hosts can invite up to 50 speakers to a conversation. The initial set of creators include Grammy-nominated electronic music artist TOKiMONSTA, American football quarterback Russell Wilson, and scholar-activist Rosa Clemente.
[Read:Why entrepreneurship in emerging markets matters]
Calling all Scaleup founders! Join the Soonicorn Summit on November 28 in Amsterdam.
Meet with the leaders of Picnic, Miro, Carbon Equity and more during this exclusive event dedicated to Scaleup Founders!
Unlike Clubhouse, there’s no limit to the number of listeners. Both members and listeners can listen to the rooms in public groups, but only members can listen in private groups.
Users can find rooms via their News Feed and Facebook notifications. They can also set reminders that go off a room goes live, hit a “raise a hand” button when they want to speak, and get notifications when their friends or followers join the chat. Users can also enable live captions, a feature that’s still not offered by Clubhouse.
In a further push into the social audio market, Facebook has also started adding podcasts to the platform.
Users can listen to podcasts while scrolling through Facebook via a mini or full-screen player. They can find shows on the creators’ Facebook Pages, as well as in the News Feed, and have the option to listen while their screen is off.
The initialslate of podcastsis pretty damn slim, but Facebook says it will add more in the coming weeks.
Clubhouse competition heats up
Live Audio Rooms joins a growing list of Clubhouse clones. Tech giants includingTwitter,Reddit, andSpotifyhave also recently jumped on the social listening bandwagon, which started rolling rapidly when Clubhouse launched in March 2020.
The app’s popularity skyrocketed during the pandemic, but downloads of the IoS app have nosedived in recent months.
The launch ofClubhouse for Androidin May gave the company a much-needed shot in the arm, with more than a million new users joining within a week of the release. The coming months will be a major test of the app’s longer-term prospects.
Criticshave questionedthe post-lockdown appeal of the app, which now faces intense from larger, more established rivals.Facebook’s enormous user base and deep pockets could make Live Audio Rooms the biggest threat yet to Clubhouse.
Social listening may be more than just a passing fad, but the format’s pioneer faces a challenging future.
Story byThomas Macaulay
Thomas is a senior reporter at TNW. He covers European tech, with a focus on AI, cybersecurity, and government policy.Thomas is a senior reporter at TNW. He covers European tech, with a focus on AI, cybersecurity, and government policy.
Get the TNW newsletter
Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.