
**Update July 7, 2023: This blog post is about an older version of Threads with a different functionality. Threads is now a different app that's more like Twitter. Check out our new write-up about it!**
Threads is the new Instagram spinoff app, and itâs poised to shake up the social media world of tweens and teens. It wonât replace Instagram, but it will change how folks interact on the platform. With the release of Threads, theyâre essentially making a smaller, more tight-knit version of Instagram with a separate but related app.
When Instagram users join Threads, all their contacts are automatically transferred, and from there they can create a âClose Friendsâ group. These groups have dedicated inboxes for messages and notifications, and youâll be able to share messages, photos, and more with the members of these private groups. The interface is also designed more like Snapchat to focus more on taking pictures. Still have questions? Donât worry â the Bark Team did a deep dive into this new app and explored the features of Threads that parents need to know about.
Introducing Away Messages to Generation Z
With the new âstatusâ feature on Threads, many Instagram users will be introduced to the concept of away messages. Older millennials will definitely remember these mainstays of internet culture from the early 2000s â before texting, smartphones, and social media kept us connected 24/7, weâd leave AIM up and running on our computers with away messages letting our friends know when weâd be around.
These messages can let people know what weâre doing or where we are (âIâm in class, catch you later!â) as well as our emotional states (insert cryptic song lyrics about your devastating heartbreak here). Statuses are completely opt-in on Threads, so some may choose not to use them. Thereâs also an âauto statusâ feature that automatically shares little bits of context that give people clues without giving away your coordinates (âOn the moveâ).

Threads directly states that it doesnât actively location-share â which is technically true. But with the ability to create custom statuses means that a geo-tag isnât necessary. You donât need a real-time map to find someone if their away message announces that theyâre at the school library or the theater on Main Street. While this may not be a huge deal with real-life friends, many kids have internet-only friends â and those friends may not always be who they say they are. In these cases, thereâs the potential that they might be sharing their physical location with strangers â which is something that parents need to know about.
A Quieter Form of Cyberbullying
Instagramâs intention with Threads is âto bring you a little closer to the people you care about.â Itâs easy to see how a slightly smaller social world can help to create this kind of dynamic â you can communicate more quickly and not have to worry about what your boss or extended relatives will think of everything you post.
But with many kids, the app has the potential to create a complicated ecosystem of exclusion. For example, even when you follow someone on Instagram, if youâre not part of their Close Friends group, you wonât see their private Threads content. So if everyone at school is talking about a party you didnât even know about â because the pictures were only shared on Threads â you may feel left out. Throw in adolescent hormones and complicated social hierarchies, and voila! â thereâs a 100% chance of drama. It may not happen with all kids, but itâs something worth remembering if your kids start to experience more FOMO when they download the app.
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