Skip to main content

Twitter is hoping celebs can boost Moments by using exclusive apps

twitter celebrity apps moments selfie app
The Twitter Selfie Camera, as used by Demi Lovato, is one of several new exclusive apps designed for Twitter's celebrity and high-profile users. The camera offers Snapchat-like visual tags. Demi Lovato/Twitter
Twitter is attempting to leverage the power of its most influential users by offering them exclusive apps with which to interact with followers.

The new tools, which are reportedly only available to a few hundred verified celebrities, include an optimized Q & A organizer, and a selfie camera. The apps are thought to be part of Twitter’s latest push to boost its Moments feature.

The Twitter Q & A app is built around celebrity-fan interactions and exchanges. Regular Twitter users already know that question and answer sessions are commonplace on the service. The new app is a reader that allows celebs and their teams to trawl through the thousands of tweets directed at them during an event, in order to flag the ones they wish to reply to. Secondly, it also acts as a handy analytics tool that notifies users about the followers they’ve gained and the reach of their tweets after each event.

The Twitter Selfie Camera borrows heavily from Snapchat by allowing verified users to add visual tags (emojis, hashtags, text, the Twitter icon) to photos. It’s already been put to use on the platform by pop star Demi Lovato (see below) and others.

Happy #NMM!!! Last one before Christmas, so excited!!! Send me your @Devonnebydemi makeup free Christmas glow!! pic.twitter.com/oPZx8ehjbS

— Demi Lovato (@ddlovato) December 21, 2015

The app also boasts a feature termed Twitter Challenger, which basically prompts the user to act out a task (whether it be a cue to dance or simply to answer a question). Senator Rand Paul gave a shout-out to the Twitter Challenger function in a recent tweet, posted from the social network’s New York HQ. Coincidentally, the feature resembles a function available on the recent viral social media sensation, Peach. The recently released app (from the co-founder of the Twitter-owned video service, Vine) includes a lightbulb icon that, when tapped, asks questions of the user in order to help them post more frequently.

Having fun with @Twitter's new challenger App here at their NY HQ and taking questions for the #RandRally pic.twitter.com/IMpk7v8bKh

— Rand Paul (@RandPaul) January 15, 2016

Overall, the new tools indicate that Twitter is offering its most powerful users the ability to branch out in imaginative new ways. For Twitter, that will mean exclusive content (in the case of the Selfie Camera, the Twitter icon even acts as a watermark, ensuring you know where it happened first), which it promises to use in its self-curated Moments section.

“We encourage partners to basically post really great native, rich, unique content. They know that if they do that they will likely get featured in Moments, what we’re doing is a tool to make that easier,” Jinen Kamdar, the global director of product for Twitter Media, told TechCrunch.

Editors' Recommendations

Saqib Shah
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Saqib Shah is a Twitter addict and film fan with an obsessive interest in pop culture trends. In his spare time he can be…
Google has made its own camera app for the cheapest Android phones you can buy
google android go camera app

There’s no need to worry anymore about slow, unacceptable camera experiences on the cheapest Android phones you can buy. Google has announced Camera Go, its own camera app for the Android Go Edition software, which is used on ultra-low-cost smartphones around the world. The first phone to use Camera Go is the Nokia 1.3, announced alongside the Nokia 8.3 5G on March 19. and it’s a significant step in making it, and phones just like it, way more usable every day.

If you haven’t heard of Android Go Edition, it’s a spin-off version of Android, much like Android One seen on some Motorola and Nokia phones. Except it’s for even more affordable devices, while Android One has graduated to be used on more mid-range hardware. We like Android Go, because it stops cheap Android phones from only running hopelessly out-of-date versions of Android, which makes them slow, unattractive, and potentially less secure.

Read more
The Twitter app is crashing for Android users: Here’s how to fix it
Hand holding a Twitter phone

If you have the Twitter app downloaded on your phone, you may have noticed it hasn’t been working right. A recent update made the app crash before opening, but there’s a way to fix it. 

Version 8.28 of the Twitter app crashes as soon as it is opened on your phone, according to users’ reports and Techradar. Android users appear to be the ones most affected since Android devices allow automatic app updates. 

Read more
Twitter’s #CashAppFriday hashtag is filled with scammers
internet purchase exchange location news handing money to transaction

What was meant to be a trending Twitter hashtag is turning out to be a scammers paradise to trick users into sending over money in the hopes they receive large sums of money back.

A new study published on Thursday, October 24, by Satnam Narang for Tenable, a company dedicated to cyber exposure, reveals that scammers have been taking advantage of the #CashAppFriday giveaway hashtag. Square, the creator of Cash App, promotes the hashtag every Friday, asking users to tweet to their official account their “cashtag” or username, to choose a random person to deposit money to through the app. As it turns out, it’s proven to be easy for scammers to copy.

Read more