Trump's Truth Social app launches on Apple App Store
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[February 21, 2022]
By Kenneth Li, Julia Love and Helen Coster
(Reuters) - Donald Trump's new social media
venture, Truth Social, launched late on Sunday in Apple's App Store,
potentially marking the former president's return to social media after
he was banned from several platforms last year.
The app was available to download shortly before midnight ET and was
automatically downloaded to Apple Inc devices belonging to users who had
pre-ordered the app.
Some users reported either having trouble registering for an account or
were added to a waitlist with a message: "Due to massive demand, we have
placed you on our waitlist."
The app has been available for people invited to use it during its test
phase, Reuters previously reported.
Trump was banned from Twitter Inc, Facebook and Alphabet Inc's YouTube
following the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by his
supporters, after he was accused of posting messages inciting violence.
Led by former Republican U.S. Representative Devin Nunes, Trump Media &
Technology Group (TMTG), the venture behind Truth Social, joins a
growing portfolio of technology companies that are positioning
themselves as champions of free speech and hope to draw users who feel
their views are suppressed on more established platforms.
So far none of the newer companies, which include Twitter competitors
Gettr and Parler and video site Rumble, have come close to matching the
popularity of their mainstream counterparts.
"This week we will begin to roll out on the Apple App Store. That's
going to be awesome, because we're going to get so many more people that
are going to be on the platform," Nunes said in a Sunday appearance on
Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo".
"Our goal is, I think we're going to hit it, I think by the by the end
of March we're going to be fully operational at least within the United
States," he added.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative
Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Orlando, Florida, U.S.
February 28, 2021. REUTERS/Octavio Jones
Truth Social's app store page
detailing its version history showed the first public version of the
app, or version 1.0 was available a day ago, confirming a Reuters
report. The current version 1.0.1 includes "bug fixes," according to
the page.
DRUMMING SUPPORT
On Friday, Nunes was on the app urging users to follow more
accounts, share photos and videos and participate in conversations,
in an apparent attempt to drum up activity, according to a person
with knowledge of the matter.
Among Nunes' posts, he welcomed a new user who appeared to be a
Catholic priest and encouraged him to invite more priests to join,
according to the person with knowledge of the matter.
Even as details of the app begin trickling out, TMTG remains mostly
shrouded in secrecy and is regarded with skepticism by some in tech
and media circles. It is unclear, for example, how the company is
funding its current growth.
TMTG is planning to list in New York through a merger with
blank-check firm Digital World Acquisition Corp (DWAC) and stands to
receive $293 million in cash that DWAC holds in a trust, assuming no
DWAC shareholder redeems their shares, TMTG said in an Oct. 21 press
release.
Additionally, in December TMTG raised $1 billion committed financing
from private investors; that money also will not be available until
the DWAC deal closes.
Digital World's activities have come under scrutiny from the
Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority, according to a regulatory filing, and the deal
is likely months away from closing.
(Reporting by Julia Love in San Francisco and Helen Coster in New
York; Additional reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein in Washington;
Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Lincoln Feast)
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