It’s one of the most eagerly-anticipated apps of the year, and now it seems that several celebrities have been given early access to Threads. 

The new Meta app will launch at 3pm GMT tomorrow, and has been described by experts as a ‘Twitter-killer.’

However, ahead of its global release, it appears that several celebrities have been given access. 

Gordon Ramsay, Shakira and Lando Norris are just a few celebrities who have already posted on Threads. 

Meanwhile, Meta’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg has also posted his first Thread, simply writing: ‘Let’s do this. Welcome to Threads.’

It's one of the most eagerly-anticipated apps of the year, and now it seems that several celebrities have been given early access to Threads

It's one of the most eagerly-anticipated apps of the year, and now it seems that several celebrities have been given early access to Threads

It’s one of the most eagerly-anticipated apps of the year, and now it seems that several celebrities have been given early access to Threads

Gordon Ramsay wrote: 'Is this where I find the lamb sauce??'

Gordon Ramsay wrote: 'Is this where I find the lamb sauce??'

Shakira simply posted: 'Well hello Threads'

Shakira simply posted: 'Well hello Threads'

Gordon Ramsay, Shakira and Lando Norris are just a few celebrities who have already posted on Threads

Threads is a free app that’s being described by Meta as a place where ‘communities come together’ to discuss topics through text – which sounds rather a lot like Twitter. 

‘Threads is where communities come together to discuss everything from the topics you care about today to what’ll be trending tomorrow,’ the app description says.

‘Whatever it is you’re interested in, you can follow and connect directly with your favorite creators and others who love the same things – or build a loyal following of your own to share your ideas, opinions and creativity with the world.’ 

It will go live at 3pm GMT tomorrow, with anyone who already has an Instagram account set to be given a Threads account with the same username.

Ahead of the global launch, Meta has given several lucky celebrities early access to the app. 

Chef Gordon Ramsay posted his first Thread, cheekily writing: ‘Is this where I find the lamb sauce??’ 

Meanwhile, singer Shakira simply opted to write: ‘Well hello Threads,’ along with a a waving hand emoji. 

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has also posted his first Thread, simply writing: 'Let's do this. Welcome to Threads'

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has also posted his first Thread, simply writing: 'Let's do this. Welcome to Threads'

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has also posted his first Thread, simply writing: ‘Let’s do this. Welcome to Threads’

Formula 1 drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri have both been given early access, with Norris opting to post a video of himself with the caption: 'Waiting for my friends to join me'

Formula 1 drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri have both been given early access, with Norris opting to post a video of himself with the caption: 'Waiting for my friends to join me'

Formula 1 drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri have both been given early access, with Norris opting to post a video of himself with the caption: ‘Waiting for my friends to join me’

Formula 1 drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri have both been given early access, with Norris opting to post a video of himself with the caption: ‘Waiting for my friends to join me.’ 

Other celebrities who have posted today include footballer Kingsley Coman, MMA Heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou, 5x Christmas number one creators LadBaby, podcaster Steven Bartlett, NBA star Seth Curry, investor and business guru Gary Vee, and comedian Adam Waheed.

Threads has been nicknamed the ‘Twitter killer’ online amid animosity between rival billionaires Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg, who have said they would like a cage fight with the Colosseum in Rome a potential venue

Musk appears to be more keen having repeatedly urged Twitter users to delete their Facebook accounts, calling the social network ‘lame’ in the past

Initially, Threads will only be available on iOS when it’s released on Thursday, so Android users will have to wait. 

It’s possible Meta has timed the release of Threads to capitalise on recent anger directed at Twitter, which has been putting more and more features behind a paywall. 

Musk revealed at the weekend that users who aren’t subscribed to its £11 per month subscription service Twitter Blue are limited to reading 600 tweets per day – although he later said this would soon increase to 800. 

It sparked the trending hashtag #RIPTwitter and caused ‘delete Twitter’ searches on Google to skyrocket 983 per cent in the UK, according to comparison service CasinoAlpha. 

Twitter dropped another bombshell this week when it revealed TweetDeck will only be available to people paying for Twitter Blue in less than a month’s time. 

TweetDeck – a desktop application that displays tweets in columns – was acquired by Twitter for $40 million in 2011 after operating as its own independent application.

Timeline of Elon Musk’s eventful time at Twitter so far 

October 27: Musk is officially made the new owner of Twitter, and tweets ‘the bird is freed’.

November 1: Musk confirms plans to change the system of ‘Blue Tick’ verification on Twitter, for a reduced subscription fee of $8 a month.

November 4: Musk lays off half of Twitter’s workforce as an alleged cost-cutting measure, claiming he had ‘no choice’. 

November 9: Musk launches the ‘Twitter Blue’ subscription service which verifies accounts for a monthly fee.

November 11: The Twitter Blue service is paused due to accounts purchasing verification and using it to impersonate brands and public figures.

November 12: Musk fires 80 per cent of Twitter contractors without warning.

November 15: Musk fires employees that posted negatively about him on the business messaging app Slack. The lawsuit between Musk and Twitter is dismissed.

November 16:  Twitter staff are told they need to sign a pledge to be able to stay on in their roles where they would be ‘working long hours at high intensity’ or receive three months of severance pay, resulting in a mass exodus.

November 18: A news-ticker was projected onto Twitter HQ in San Francisco dubbing Musk as a ‘space Karen’, ‘mediocre manchild’ and ‘bankruptcy baby’.

November 23: A Twitter user reported that 5.4 million phone numbers and email addresses leaked on the dark web, before his account was suspended. 

November 26: Financial Times revealed that 50 of the platform’s top 100 advertisers have paused their ads.

November 29:  Platformer reported that Twitter is in the process of reinstating around 62,000 banned accounts that each have more than 10,000 followers.

December 12: Twitter Blue is re-launched with new Blue Tick reviewing process.

January 11: Twitter starts automatically redirecting users to the ‘For You’ tab – its algorithmic feed of tweets – every time they open the app. 

February 8: Twitter expands the character limit to 4,000 for Twitter Blue subscribers in the US. Shortly after, the site encounters technical difficulties.

February 12: Musk orders staff to revamp Twitter’s tweet promotion algorithm after his Super Bowl tweet didn’t get enough impressions.  

February 15: Twitter announces it will remove SMS two-factor authentication (2FA) from the free version of Twitter – a decision a security expert labelled ‘absurd’ that will lead to ‘so many accounts hacked’.

February 25: Twitter reveals a fresh round of layoffs that brought its workforce down to under 2,000 – a sharp fall from the 7,500 employed when the billionaire first took over in October.

March 28: Musk announces it will stop people from voting in Twitter polls or having their tweets appear in the For You tab if they do not pay for Twitter Blue. 

April 11: Musk gives an interview with the BBC at Twitter’s San Francisco HQ where he says he’s been sleeping on the floor of the company’s offices. Musk also accused the interviewer of lying because he couldn’t back up accusations about hate speech on the platform. 

June 21: Musk says he is ‘up for a cage match’ fight with rival tech CEO Mark Zuckerberg.  

July 1: Musk announces limits on how many tweets users can see per day – 600 for people who aren’t signed up for Twitter Blue, and 6,000 for Twitter Blue subscribers.  

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

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