Itâd be a big selling point for the subscription service. | Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge
Itâs starting to look like the upcoming version of TweetDeck, the power-user-focused version of the Twitter app, wonât be free. Security researcher Jane Manchun Wong has discovered a work-in-progress sign-up page for the app, which boasts that itâs a âpowerful, real-time tool for people who live on Twitterâ and offers an ad-free experience.
While the page doesnât explicitly say youâll have to pay Twitter to access TweetDeck, companies donât usually advertise âhelps you avoid the thing that makes us moneyâ as a feature of free products (even if, like the current version of TweetDeck, it is). And wouldnât you know it, Twitterâs already got a paid subscription service that itâs trying to sell to its power users.
Twitter is filling in the new @TweetDeck signup page that theyâre working on. Two new highlights:
1. A link for âthe legacy version of TweetDeckâ (even though it might be deprecated at some point in the future)
2. âAd-free experienceâ being marketed as the selling point đ https://t.co/XP6sYsTUGM pic.twitter.com/fRc0ujZ7o2
â Jane Manchun Wong (@wongmjane) March 30, 2022
This isnât the first time weâve heard the suggestion that Twitterâs looking to monetize TweetDeck. Earlier this month, Manchun Wong dug up code that seemed to redirect non-Blue subscribers trying to access the new version of TweetDeck to the Twitter Blue sign-up page. And over a year ago, Bloomberg reported that Twitter was considering a subscription service component to the app. That report came just before we heard from Twitter that it was working on a âbig overhaulâ for TweetDeck.
Weâve seen a preview of that overhaul. Itâs extensive (and divisive) and likely took a good amount of work. Itâs not impossible that Twitterâs doing it as part of its drive to seem more friendly towards the community and third-party developers, but it feels more likely that the company launched Twitter Blue knowing TweetDeck could be a huge selling point.
The $2.99 a month subscription already feels like itâs aimed at people who use Twitter professionally, so whatâs essentially the pro version of its app would fit right into the serviceâs feature-set.
There is, of course, a counter-point to this theory: Twitter Blue isnât ad-free. That fact even makes up two points in the FAQ for the service. So how would TweetDeck being ad-free be evidence that itâll soon be part of Twitter Blue?
Itâs a fair question, but honestly, that contradiction convinces me more â having TweetDeck as a Blue feature would let Twitter offer its paying subscribers a way to get an ad-free experience without it having to do the work of exorcising them from its web and mobile apps. Itâs a bit of a win-win (for Twitter, at least).
Twitter said it had ânothing to share on this at the momentâ in response to The Vergeâs question about whether it had plans to monetize TweetDeck, and it hasnât announced an official launch date for the TweetDeck update. When it does come, though, I suspect it gets billed as a great new perk for Blue subscribers. (And given how much my colleagues love TweetDeck, I also suspect there could be quite a few new subscribers to the service if thatâs the case.)