The app, which launched Wednesday, is “Instagram’s text-based conversation app”; its Apple App Store description shows images that encourage users to “connect over conversation” and “share your point of view.”
In the letter, first reported on by Semafor, attorney Alex Spiro accused Meta of hiring “dozens” of former Twitter employees, alleging these alleged employees “had and continue to have access to Twitter’s trade secrets and other highly confidential information; that these employees owe ongoing obligations to Twitter; and that many of these employees have improperly retained Twitter documents and electronic devices.” Spiro further alleges that Meta “deliberately” tasked these employees with making a Twitter “copycat” app using the company’s trade secrets. Doing so, Spiro says, violated state and federal laws.
Spiro threatens Zuckerberg with seeking legal remedies to stop the Threads app and warns him against Meta “crawling or scraping Twitter’s followers or following data.”
“Please consider this letter a formal notice that Meta must preserve any documents that could be relevant to a dispute between Twitter, Meta, and/or former Twitter employees who now work for Meta,” Spiro writes. “That includes, but is not limited to, all documents related to the recruitment, hiring, and onboarding of these former Twitter employees, the development of Meta’s competing Threads app, and any communications between these former Twitter employees and any agent, representative, or employee or Meta.”