Exclusive-Two key tech execs quit Truth Social after troubled app launch
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[April 04, 2022] By
Helen Coster and Julia Love
(Reuters) - The two Southern tech
entrepreneurs had the two qualities that Donald Trump’s Truth Social
startup needed: tech-industry expertise and a politically conservative
worldview aligned with the former president, a rare combination in the
liberal-leaning industry centered in San Francisco.
Josh Adams and Billy Boozer - the company’s chiefs of technology and
product development - joined the venture last year and quickly became
central players in its bid to build a social-media empire, backed by
Trump’s powerful brand, to counter what many conservatives deride as
“cancel culture” censorship from the left.
Less than a year later, both have resigned their senior posts at a
critical juncture for the company’s smartphone-app release plans,
according to two sources familiar with the venture.
The departures followed the troubled launch of the company’s iPhone app
on Feb. 20. Weeks later, many users remain on a waiting list, unable to
access the platform. Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG) Chief
Executive Devin Nunes, a former Republican congressman, said publicly
that the company aimed to make the app fully operational within the
United States by the end of March.
The company has an app for iPhones but no app for Android phones, which
comprise more than 40% of the U.S. market, though the company has
advertised seeking an engineer to build one.
Boozer declined to comment and Adams did not respond to a request.
Representatives for TMTG and Trump did not respond to requests for
comment.
This account is based on Reuters interviews with eight people with
knowledge of Truth Social’s activities, all of whom spoke on condition
of anonymity.
Truth Social is part of a growing sector of tech firms catering to
conservatives and marketing themselves as free-speech champions. The
platform promised to give Trump unfettered communication with the
American public more than a year after he was kicked off Twitter,
Facebook and YouTube for allegedly inciting or glorifying violence
during the Jan. 6, 2021, riots at the U.S. Capitol.
The exit of two executives critical to the app-launch efforts could
imperil the company’s progress as it tries to prove it can compete with
mainstream platforms such as Twitter, said two people familiar with the
company. Like Twitter, Trump’s platform offers users the chance to
connect and share their thoughts.
“If Josh has left… all bets are off,” one of those sources said of tech
chief Adams, calling him the “brains” behind Truth Social’s technology.
Another source familiar with the venture said that Boozer also had a
major leadership role as product chief, running management across
technology infrastructure, design and development teams.
Reuters could not determine the specific circumstances behind the
executives’ resignations, or whether they have been replaced or their
duties reassigned. It also remains unclear whether Adams and Boozer
still work on the venture in a different capacity after quitting their
executive posts.
Their resignations came before their key roles in the closely watched
company were even publicly known outside of Truth Social’s secretive
culture.
Adams and Boozer worked at a level just below Wes Moss and Andy Litinsky,
both former castmates on “The Apprentice,” Trump’s hit reality TV show,
according to a source familiar with the venture.
Moss and Litinsky have been the “senior, day-to-day leadership” running
the company since it started last summer, the source said. The two men
had pitched Trump on the social-media venture in January of 2021,
according to a person familiar with the company’s founding.
Reuters could not determine the specific job titles or responsibilities
of Moss and Litinsky, neither of whom responded to requests for comment.
TMTG has released little information about its executive leadership team
outside of CEO Nunes, who joined in December.
Another open question is how TMTG is funding its current growth. The
company is planning to go public through a merger with blank-check firm
Digital World Acquisition Corp (DWAC). The deal is under scrutiny by the
Securities and Exchange Commission and is likely months away from being
finalized.
DWAC disclosed in a regulatory filing last December that the SEC was
probing the deal. The SEC has not addressed the nature of the inquiry
and did not respond to a request for comment on Sunday.
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The Truth social network logo is seen on a smartphone in front of a
display of former U.S. President Donald Trump in this picture
illustration taken February 21, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
Photo
Investors have pledged $1 billion to TMTG but they won’t hand over that money
until the DWAC deal closes.
Trump’s level of involvement with his namesake company and the Truth Social
platform also remains unclear. The former president so far has written only one
post - or “truth” - on the platform, writing on Feb. 14: “Get Ready! Your
favorite President will see you soon!”
Downloads of the Truth Social app have declined precipitously, from 866,000
installations the week of its launch to 60,000 the week of March 14, according
to estimates from data analytics firm Sensor Tower. The firm estimates the Truth
Social app has been downloaded 1.2 million times in all, trailing far behind
rival conservative apps Parler and Gettr at 11.3 million and 6.8 million
installations, respectively.
TARGETING BIG TECH
When they joined the company last year, Adams and Boozer embraced the vision for
a social-media company with an “anti-cancel culture” mission, according to one
of the sources familiar with the venture. The executives believed deeply in
creating an “open platform, where as long as you don’t say anything that is
criminal,” the person said, “you can be entitled to your own opinion.”
Reuters could not determine the exact date the two executives joined the firm,
but they were working on the Truth Social app by the fall, according to two
sources familiar with the venture.
As the company sought engineers that had both the requisite skills and
compatible politics, Adams and Boozer fit the bill, another person familiar with
the company said. To gauge whether potential recruits were a good fit, hiring
managers explored candidates’ political ideology, in at least one case by
scanning their social media profiles and listening to their appearances on
podcasts, that person said.
The company’s political bent limited its hiring pool. At least one candidate
rebuffed a recruitment overture, saying he couldn’t stomach working for Trump,
the person familiar with the company said. Others who rejected the company's
outreach said they were concerned about job security and feared the company and
its employees might be prime targets for hackers, according to two people with
knowledge of the firm's recruiting efforts.
Adams joined Trump’s company after building a career as a software developer
from his native Alabama. He co-founded Daring Bit Assembly, a product and
software development consultancy whose clients have included the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and e-commerce startup
Shipt, according to Daring Bit Assembly’s website.
Adams is a “constitutionalist” who believes in strict interpretation of the
authors’ original intent for the foundational U.S. document, said one of the
people familiar with company operations. In May 2021, Adams filed a lawsuit in
federal court in Alabama against the state’s governor, a Republican, and its
health officer, alleging that the state’s mask mandate during the coronavirus
pandemic violated the U.S. and Alabama Constitutions. The case was dismissed in
June 2021.
Boozer, also a political conservative who previously lived in Alabama, had
collaborated frequently with Adams before joining Truth Social, according to the
source. With Adams in place to steer the back-end infrastructure of the app,
Boozer brought a strong command of the front-end technology that touches users,
according to that source.
The pair kept a low profile despite holding high-ranking positions at the
closely watched venture.
Neither Adams nor Boozer disclosed their work at Truth Social on their LinkedIn
profiles, which list numerous other jobs and ventures from their past. The
company did not publicly announce their hiring.
Adams’ and Boozer’s roles were listed in a November investor presentation as the
TMTG technology team’s chief technology officer and chief product officer - but
without their last names. When Truth Social launched, they posted frequently on
the platform, but again presenting themselves to the public only as “Josh A.”
and “Billy B.”
(Reporting by Helen Coster and Julia Love; additional reporting by Krystal Hu
and Echo Wang in New York; editing by Kenneth Li and Brian Thevenot)
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