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Social Media

The internet has been transformed by social media, and the many platforms are now critical to how we communicate online. The Verge keeps a close eye on everything that’s happening in the social media landscape, covering key players like Meta, X, and TikTok, reporting on new features, following cultural moments, and breaking down the policies that shape how the platforms work.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The social web, now in Wordpress.com’s reader.

The reader, which already lets you track things like RSS feeds and podcasts, can now serve as a hub to track your Bluesky/AT Proto and Mastodon feeds, too. Over the second half of this month, the team is working on adding features like a shared composer to make posts across networks.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Discord is back after a major outage.

For more than an hour on Friday, many people were having trouble connecting to Discord, with the platform showing a message saying that there were “increased API errors.” Discord confirmed it was investigating issues at 3:08PM ET, and by 6:38PM ET, it reported that all “critical functionalities have recovered for all users.”

Updates: Discord says the issues are resolved.

Discord outage error
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Digg is back again — again.

Less than two months after shutting down its open beta relaunch and downsizing its team, Digg has launched a new version at di.gg. This updated version of the platform, instead of functioning similar to Reddit, is more like an online sentiment tracker. Right now, it’s focused only on tracking AI news, but “it’s going to be all the things,” according to Kevin Rose.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Who’s paying for these Perplexity ads?

Earlier this week I wrote about the social media “clippers” that get paid to semi-covertly promote podcasts, TV shows, and other media through anonymous accounts. One of the clipping campaigns was for Perplexity AI — but nobody can tell me who, exactly, is responsible for the clips:

Reached via email, Perplexity distanced itself from clipping company Vyro, with spokesperson Jesse Dwyer saying Perplexity “has no knowledge” of the company and “takes any unauthorized use of the Perplexity name or logo very seriously.” When asked to confirm Perplexity had not run or authorized clipping campaigns, Dwyer initially stopped responding to The Verge. After publication, Dwyer told The Verge it was “not accurate” to say Perplexity launched the clipping campaign.

So who did?

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
“It feels so gross to see videos of yourself that’s not even you.”

That’s what one actor said after a micro drama she starred in was promoted using AI clips of her in underwear. Multiple actors have had similar experiences, including ads featuring nude scenes and threesomes that they never shot. In the age of The Clippening, it doesn’t always matter if the content being clipped is real or not.

Your feed is overrun with clips — this is the cutthroat community of ‘clippers’ behind it

They cut up podcasts, videos, and events into infinite shorter versions. How long can it last?

Mia Sato
Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
Instagram is getting an “AI creator” label.

Did those influencers in your Instagram feed go to Coachella, and do they even exist in real life? Creators can voluntarily add a new label to their account if they frequently post AI-generated or modified content starting on Monday.

This is in addition to Meta’s automatically applied “AI info” label for content on its platforms that it detects as being AI-modified.

Screenshots of Instagram’s new “AI creator” label
Image: Meta
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Divine, a Vine-like platform featuring a lot of old Vines, is getting an iOS and Android app.

The platform, built on the decentralized Nostr protocol and launched initially last year, “preserves archived videos from the Internet Archive” (it says it has “restored access” to about 500,000 Vines) and lets users post new ones. Despite today’s launch on app stores, it’s currently invite-only, according to a blog post.

Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
Norway could be the next nation to ban kids from social media.

As Reuters reports, Norwegian Prime ​Minister Jonas Gahr Støre announced plans for a bill barring teens from social media until “January 1st the year a child turns 16,” similar to Australia’s.

“I can now confirm that we are planning to submit a bill to the Parliament before the end of the year. We are introducing this legislation because we want a childhood where children get to be children. Play, friendships, and everyday life must not be taken over by algorithms and screens.”

Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
Meta’s new Account system manages your WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, and other logins.

This hub holds certain settings that work across Meta’s apps and allows for using a single password for access across all accounts and managing passkeys.

Any accounts users currently have connected in Meta’s Account Center will automatically transfer to the new Meta Account that’s rolling out “over the next year.”

Screenshots of Meta’s new Meta Account hub
Screenshots of the security pages in Meta’s new Meta Account hub
A screenshot of cross-app settings in the Meta Account hub
A screenshot of the passkey login page on Instagram
1/4Image: Meta
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Bluesky posts can now have higher quality images.

The platform has doubled the maximum file size to 2MB, and the resolution limit has been upped to 4000x4000. There are photo carousels now, too.

A screenshot of Bluesky’s photo carousels.
Check out the carousels in motion in Bluesky’s post.
Image: Bluesky
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Threads is getting live chats.

When you’re in a Threads Community’s live chat, you can talk with real time with other users about what’s going on. For the NBA playoffs, the NBA Threads Community will be hosting some live chats to follow games. Live chats will come to other Community feeds in the coming months, Meta says.

Screenshots of Threads’ live chat feature.
Image: Meta
The Republican Navy SEAL who couldn’t survive a flame war

Dan Crenshaw was supposed to be the future of the GOP. Instead, he proved politicians really can be too online.

Tina Nguyen
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Bluesky has been dealing with a DDoS attack for nearly a full day.

As a result, users have been experiencing “intermittent interruptions in service for their feeds, notifications, threads and search,” Bluesky says. The company first got a report of “intermittent app outages” at around 2:40AM ET this morning.

Bluesky says it has not seen “any evidence of unauthorized access to private user data” due to the attack. It will share another update no later than 1PM ET on Friday.

Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
Threads is finally getting direct messages on the desktop.

A new “Messages” tab appears in this preview of its redesigned web layout that head of Threads, Connor Hayes, posted on Thursday, as Engadget reports.

Threads got DMs in 2025, but only on Android and iOS. Hayes noted that users will start to see Messages on the web version “over the coming weeks.”

A screenshot of the redesigned web layout for Threads
Image: Connor Hayes via Threads
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
EU says its “age verification app” is ready to go.

EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced that the open-source, cross-platform European Age Verification Solution it has been testing will be available publicly soon, reports Bloomberg. She said it is “completely anonymous,” using a passport or ID card to verify age for access to online services, with accuracy that complies with EU child-protection regulations.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
I see what you did there.

Digital privacy non-profit the Electronic Frontier Foundation has announced it’s leaving X, citing a sharp decline in views for its posts. With EFF off the platform, some commenters agree with the organization’s thinking.

Krankor:

eff x, I agree

Get the day’s best comment and more in my free newsletter, The Verge Daily.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Meta removes ads from lawyers seeking plaintiffs for social media addiction cases.

Now that a jury has ruled against Meta and YouTube in a landmark trial, the sharks are circling, and what better place to find potential clients than on those social media platforms? The only problem is that Axios reports Meta pulled “more than a dozen” such ads from firms like Morgan & Morgan and Sokolove Law on Thursday.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Bluesky has had some issues today.

Outage reports have gone up and down on Downdetector today, and my feed occasionally hasn’t loaded. Bluesky says the issue, which it blamed on an upstream service provider, “appears” to have been fixed, but users have taken the problems as a chance to poke fun at unpopular comments from the Bluesky team about vibe coding.

Updates: Added Bluesky’s status updates.

A jury says Meta and Google hurt a kid. What now?
Play

Why nuclear options like age limits and repealing Section 230 won’t make social media safer.

Nilay Patel
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
April Fools’ 2026: Yahoo’s Scroll Stopper stops doomscrolling.

One way to reduce screen time? The Scrōll Stoppr by Yahoo. Who knows if it actually ships, but these are listed in the TikTok Shop at a price of $4.99 with free shipping for anyone who’s tried every other way to put their phone down.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Paul McCartney’s mysterious Reddit ban.

The musician’s account disappeared after posting pictures from his no-phones-allowed concert to r/PaulMcCartney, spurring media reports that mods had banned him. However, as 404Media points out, the subreddit’s mods say it wasn’t them, and a site admin commented with an attempt at an explanation:

Hey all! Just for clarity, that account was never banned from the site (or the subreddit) there was a technical error that made it appear to be banned from the site. This has now been resolved. Sorry for any confusion this caused or issue for the mod team here!

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Happy Opening Day to all who celebrate.

Baseball is back this week and we’ve already got the afterglow of a great World Baseball Classic, an upcoming Heated Rivalry-themed game night, and Netflix completely missing the first-ever robot ump challenge because they cut away to a mid-game interview. It’s a long season — can MLB keep the momentum going?

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