Advertisement

Twitter Fleets: Memes show netizens mocking for following the same old drill

Twitter Fleets
Advertisement

Twitter, after a long testing period, rolled out a new feature that will allow tweets to disappear after 24 hours.

The new feature from Twitter, called “fleets” is similar to vanishing posts on Snapchat, Instagram and WhatsApp Stories. India, only the third country in the world (after Brazil and Italy) to implement it, Twitter Fleets sure got netizens talking.

On June 9, Twitter India in its tweet wrote, “We’re testing a way for you to think out loud without the Likes, Retweets, or replies, called Fleets! Best part? They disappear after 24 hours.”

The new feature follows the same old drill as on other social media platforms. Circles appear in the head of your timeline. You can click on “+” to add Fleets to your Twitter account. You also have access to stories of accounts you are following, in the adjacent circles to yours.

Basically, this new feature has nothing new. The feature which has began rolling out to Android and iOS smartphone users in India does nothing new except eliminating the race of “retweets” and “likes”.

Advertisement

It didn’t take long for #Fleets to become the top trending hashtag in India.

So, here’s a bunch of memes to let you know about Twitter’s new addition.

Netizens start mocking Twitter for following the same old drill:

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Read More News On

Catch all the Business News, Breaking News Event and Latest News Updates on The BOL News


Download The BOL News App to get the Daily News Update & Live News.


Advertisement
End of Story
BOL Stories of the day
TECNO introduces latest Spark 40 in Pakistan
Partial solar eclipse to grace skies on September 21, 2025 — Here's How to Watch Safely
Grit to Gigabytes, from Great to Beta Generation
FDA clears Apple watch to detect hypertension, a first for wearables
Nano Banana craze: Google’s Gemini AI figurines makes buzz on social media
Global Google maps outage disrupts mobile navigation
Next Article
Exit mobile version