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Clubhouse clones are coming

101 points| finphil | 5 years ago |philsiarri.medium.com | reply

108 comments

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[+] nstart|5 years ago|reply
This seems like an ok time to point to Shaan's twitter thread on why he believes clubhouse will fail [1]. Nothing is guaranteed of course, but it is an entertaining read. It's designed to be a bit over the top, silicon valley esque story style. But the person who wrote it, is writing from their experience of actually launching, and burning out in an attempt to build a similar company which makes the thread that much more interesting.

In any case, it surprises me that Clubhouse is staying in closed mode for so long knowing that the bigger social networks are coming for them, especially Twitter which is where I see the most number of people talking about Clubhouse.

[1] https://twitter.com/ShaanVP/status/1371972261004070913

[+] naravara|5 years ago|reply
I think Clubhouse is making a big mistake if they don't sell out to a bigger player. It's like the Steve Jobs quote to Dropbox about how what they have is a feature, not a product. What Clubhouse offers should be built into a broader social network since it clearly can't survive on independently for the reasons Shaan mentions.

Discord is already launching "Stages" which aims to replicate Clubhouse's main selling point. And I'm sure Twitter, Facebook, and Microsoft are gunning for them too. I have trouble seeing how they survive.

[+] Yizahi|5 years ago|reply
Closed mode is the reason it was so hyped over last months. Arguably the ONLY reason, but that's debatable. I'm pretty sure that multiuser audio only applications weren't invented in 2020.
[+] btown|5 years ago|reply
From the linked thread:

> When a user opens an app (IG, youtube, TikTok) they need juicy content within 7 seconds (or they bounce). This is the "Interesting-ness" problem.

> Those other apps (IG, Tiktok etc.) have millions of pieces of content to choose from. So their algorithms get really really good at finding juicy content for you right away. But clubhouse is LIVE. So you need something INTERESTING that's ALSO happening RIGHT NOW.

> multiplying "content is interesting" and "content is live" doesn't just make the problem 2x harder..it makes it 200x harder.

The interesting thing is that Twitter Spaces solves all of this organically. No interesting Space content? Well, you were already there to scroll through your feed, so you can get your dopamine hit just by doing that anyways. Notifications can take advantage of your entire interest graph, not just your contact list and Clubhouse-specific opt-ins.

I've spent significant time in Twitter Spaces. The UX is practically identical. Panel discussions are equally professional. There's naturally going to be more professional content because people can justify spending time to build a Twitter following WAY more than they can justify spending time to build a Clubhouse following. When Twitter launched Fleets I thought it was a massive waste of screen real estate having them as a position:sticky-esque element, but Spaces live there as well, and it flips the equation on its head: you want to stay up-to-date with the spaces that are going on at any time, so it makes total sense for spaces to be top-of-screen and top-of-mind.

And while there may be some who are afraid of linking their Twitter presence to the frank thoughts they might want to share... Clubhouse IMO is even worse on this, because the insistence on real identities prevents an entire class of pseudonymous discussion from happening, and it's only a place people can feel safe to say controversial things while it's a relatively small invite-only community, which works counter to the growth trend. Not to mention opening to pseudonymous accounts enables voice-only acting as fictional characters, which will democratize the Virtual Youtuber trend in a huge way.

Assuming Twitter can stick to an April release, I fear Clubhouse will be spoken of with the same historical reverence we use for Digg, and the same meteoric two-year lifespan of Pets.com.

[+] anoraca|5 years ago|reply
I think that it's closed so that you are forced to receive an invitation to join, and to send an invitation you have to give the app access to your phone's contacts (at least on iOS when I looked at it, quickly uninstalled). There were a number of dark patterns utilized to try and get elevated permissions and access to contacts.
[+] float4|5 years ago|reply
> [...] it is an entertaining read

The exact opposite for me. Their points are interesting, but to me the format just felt like a very poor attempt at creative writing. The first ~10 tweets convey absolutely no useful information. They only "set the scene".

I can see how others do find it entertaining though.

[+] vallas|5 years ago|reply
17.2k jealous people on Shaan's tweet.
[+] Barrin92|5 years ago|reply
Technically speaking it's difficult to see if the label 'clone' is justified given that the concept of audio only chat rooms isn't exactly new.

The biggest clubhouse 'innovation' might have been to make it an invite only app and thus create a cascade of FOMO in the style of Gibson's 'antimarketing' in Zero History where someone creates the world's most sought after jeans by simply not selling it anywhere.

[+] tosh|5 years ago|reply
I think the drop-in audio room is here to stay. It is a format.

hn is a text room. Similar to how Twitter is a text room. Similar yet different.

https://twitter.com/__tosh/status/1377587398973005827?s=20

I'm working on Jam which is an open source implementation of the drop-in audio room format, in many ways similar to Clubhouse or Twitter Spaces but also different (and more versatile).

Show HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26131123

https://gitlab.com/jam-systems/jam

Benedict Evans' take on Slack adding audio rooms and what it means for Clubhouse:

https://twitter.com/benedictevans/status/1377363658167050241...

Some things are so fundamental that it is difficult to say whether they were "invented" or "original". In some cases _discovered_ seems more fitting.

http://www.paulgraham.com/rootsoflisp.html

[+] wcarss|5 years ago|reply
That tweet captures why I began building async audio-chat in a slack-like app last year: https://heysync.chat

It's very exciting to see that they finally 'get it' too -- that feeling, that this is something discovered more than invented, is exactly what drove my initial interest in the idea.

[+] robgibbons|5 years ago|reply
Same-same, but different. But still same.
[+] TheAceOfHearts|5 years ago|reply
My impression is that Clubhouse makes people feel like they're part of a special privileged group by artifically and arbitrarily restricting access to a small number of dedicated (if not outright sycophantic) listeners.

It's ultimately a system which benefits highly privileged people who have a lot of free time and flexibility while excluding people with more restrictive schedules.

Digital media can be consumed at any time and in any way you chose, while this seems like it's reverting to the terrible legacy model.

The true master grifter has this outstanding ability to transform the simplest of ideas from a 2 minute explanation into a 20 minute diatribe. One must really love the sound of their own voice in order to spend so much time yaking on endlessly without saying anything of substance.

[+] ramoz|5 years ago|reply
There are the Ivory Tower types, and they can be annoying. There is a lot of genuine.

I rose to decent popularity and was hooked initially. I never quiet understood wanting to be the listener or how that experience is sustainable. I guess I gained followers bc I spoke in convos that were relevant to my interests & I was speaking quite a bit. I've since lost a ton of interest in the app and hop in here and there. The convos don't seem to be developing. I neither want to speak or listen any longer.

[+] IgorPartola|5 years ago|reply
Let me play devil’s advocate here: maybe Clubhouse mirrors real life in that if your friends are all getting together for happy hour at 4:30pm ok a Friday because they work jobs that let them do that or don’t work at all while you took away at your startup, you can’t make this real time event. I have learned over the past several years that making it to a real time event that isn’t recorded does make it significantly more special and memorable. Not every moment is worth having but the impact of it only happening once makes it more memorable.

Having said that, I’m not a user of Clubhouse and have no intention of using it. Discord and Zoom have been plenty good for this kind of communication without any influencers or marketers being involved.

[+] freewizard|5 years ago|reply
Not mentioned by the OP but Telegram also released an update last week to its group voice call feature, which essentially turns a channel or group into a ClubHouse room. https://telegram.org/blog/voice-chats-on-steroids
[+] meheleventyone|5 years ago|reply
Discord joined the party as well and just rolled out Stages which is basically the same thing as Clubhouse. That’s going to be super useful for us though as we quite often present to our largish community so having better moderation control is going to help out a lot. I also think having this at the community level is going to be far better than being thought lead at by people who love the sound of their own voices.
[+] pibefision|5 years ago|reply
The same effect in WhatsApp will be amazing
[+] ausbah|5 years ago|reply
I'm still not convinced that clubhouse is anything more than real time podcasts saturated with linkedin influencers
[+] olivermarks|5 years ago|reply
Brevity was what originally made Twitter popular after the first wave of blogging. I don't think the vogue for blowhards talking at length in 'rooms' is going to last long, whether within Clubhouse or any of the other me-too cloned feature additions in other social media platforms.
[+] dylmarcor|5 years ago|reply
I think it’s more that I just don’t want it to be in vogue.
[+] twobitshifter|5 years ago|reply
All of the bloviating reminded me of business school classes. You want to go there to learn, but there’s a few people who just want to hear themselves talk who end up wasting your time.
[+] nowherebeen|5 years ago|reply
I am not even sure if Clubhouse has network effect in that stickiness of app isn't the number of people using it but the quality of the content. In this case, the audio rooms. As far as I can tell, 90% of rooms I see just aren't that good. I wouldn't go back to use an app just because Lebron James uses it if I don't get any value from it.
[+] shafyy|5 years ago|reply
Yes, and for the "celeb" talks like that time Elon Musk was on, it was on YouTube 5min after. So why should I download an app and be there at that exact time (which would have been in the middle of the night for me) when I can just listen to the thing on YouTube later at my own convenience?
[+] Leary|5 years ago|reply
I have never been on Clubhouse, because I don't own an Iphone. but I have listened to every one of the Clubhouse townhalls hosted by Paul Davison.

He realizes that his app is only as good as the people who are on it, whether those people came on as a part of his brilliant app design or as a coincidence of the pandemic.

In other words, he has Network Effects. Capitalized merely for effects.

[+] reidjs|5 years ago|reply
One clubhouse is already too many. Listening to clubhouse is like turning a screen reader on your LinkedIn feed.
[+] fshbbdssbbgdd|5 years ago|reply
I always preferred the well-produced podcasts where a week is spent to make an hour of content (like those made by Gimlet, Radiotopia) over the ones that just throw some people into a microphone to ramble for a few hours. It seems like Clubhouse is that latter sort, turned up to 11. But those were the most successful podcasts anyway (eg. Rogan), so Clubhouse will probably take over the world.
[+] yunohn|5 years ago|reply
> turning a screen reader on your LinkedIn feed

This is an incredibly accurate representation of Clubhouse.

[+] themolecularman|5 years ago|reply
On the other hand, while there are a lot of "influencer" rooms, there have been a lot of rooms where discussions I don't see going on anywhere else are happening.

I'm specifically talking about politics, things like CRT (critical race theory) and it's march through schools, business, and politics. As well as other controversial subjects.

At times they get heated but for the most part people are generally civil and the discussions can be enlightening.

[+] konart|5 years ago|reply
Fortunately people may have different experience
[+] readflaggedcomm|5 years ago|reply
Mumble's been available on Android and iOS for years. These upstarts don't all have network effects going for them. Traditionally, conference calls were something we all avoided.

Despite these things, and contrary to my expectations, these voice chats are popular. Recording quality beats a POTS line, but that's the only upside. Maybe it makes everybody feel like they're in their own podcast (their own "pod" as the kids say).

I guess this is the 21st century's version of IRC for casual, low-overhead chat. Nothing simple is ever good enough for non-enthusiasts.

[+] telesilla|5 years ago|reply
Exactly, I was wondering why free conference.com which has been around for years, or something like it, couldn't just whitelabel itself and boom, a million easy competitors.
[+] isaacimagine|5 years ago|reply
I'm a bit disappointed dogehouse wasn't mentioned..
[+] boringg|5 years ago|reply
I think Clubhouse started well but it really feels like is going downhill quickly. A16 is pushing its adoption hard (vested interest).

It's just so spammy and when I scroll through conversation it is incredibly tough to figure out where quality resides. That whole growth at all costs mantra --> As we descend down the quality chart to large scale adoption I am not really excited to see where it evolves to.

[+] 2pEXgD0fZ5cF|5 years ago|reply
The most praised and hyped aspects ("novel"/nice community, opportunities to listen to certain celebrities) were never anything inherent to Clubhouse. They were side effects of clubhouse being gated and hip among a certain crowd at the same time. Clubhouse fans can talk about their cool encounters on there all they want, it isn't something that was ever going to last more than a few weeks/months.
[+] rvz|5 years ago|reply
Invite only and still no Android app and valued at $1B? Complete horsesh*t from the VC hype machine. (and they know it.)

Now the clones / competitors are here with the same features and have their existing Android audience, Clubhouse probably needs to reassess on why they still exist. (a16z still hyping it through forced notifications)

Sounds like this train is already low on hype.

Downvoters: Ready to explain? Alright, So as I said months ago [0][1][2] "With Twitter and Facebook feature clones coming along, We'll see how Clubhouse fights for survival whilst being 'copied to death'." Today, the clones have already caught up, and 1 month later, Clubhouse STILL has no Android app.

And now you get this from LinkedIn [3]. So, how is this valuation justified as I have already asked months ago? [4]

As the competitors close in, the best time for Clubhouse to announce their Android app should be today. Why have they been unable to release it?

[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26110642

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26291534

[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26524603

[3] https://techcrunch.com/2021/03/30/linkedin-confirms-its-work...

[4] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25883362

[+] Aeolun|5 years ago|reply
Good. I still haven’t received an invite after 3 months, and I’m getting a bit tired of waiting.

Don’t even know if it would be worth the wait, but based on the comments here I shouldn’t be holding my breath.

[+] gozmike|5 years ago|reply
DM me on Twitter (Same handle as here) and I'll share an invite
[+] thrower123|5 years ago|reply
Clubhouse is going down the exact same route that Quora did. Initially, they seeded the platform with a sense of exclusivity and big name users, but it is rapidly suffering the effect of what happens to any platform as it goes broad and average quality of user goes down.
[+] theshrike79|5 years ago|reply
What is Clubhouse really?

What I've gathered is that it's like an IRC or Slack channel, but with voice? People just chat with each other. Is that really it?

Why is it a thing?

[+] jobigoud|5 years ago|reply
Isn't that the same as discord audio channels? I'm also confused about what clubhouse is or why it's popular.
[+] Tycho|5 years ago|reply
Because people enjoy talking and listening to people talk. Especially when it involves topics they are interested in, or people they are interested in. It is sort of a cross between talk radio and ham radio.
[+] supert56|5 years ago|reply
If it is this (I also don't actually know) then it sounds terrible.
[+] jgalt212|5 years ago|reply
Wait, I'm not ready for this. I'm still putting the finish touches on my Yo clone. /s
[+] bambax|5 years ago|reply
I thought Clubhouse clones referred to voice-only deep fakes that let one pretend they are in a room when they are not. This would be funny and interesting. It is sorely needed for video business meetings at least.

But no, "Clubhouse clones" refer to copycat apps of Clubhouse. What is even the point of this. We need more silence, not more occasions to let noise distract us.

[+] punnerud|5 years ago|reply
For me Clubhouse is random access to information. For this purpose it is really powerful.