Like Twitter, it offers a social feed of posts with 280-character limits.
The list of newer entrants in the markets includes apps created by former Twitter employees, a startup backed by one of Musk’s Twitter investors, and a service from former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey.
The service launched publicly in June of last year, after Musk offered to buy Twitter.
(As part of the acquisition, Musk took Twitter private and the company no longer reports user numbers in quarterly securities filings.)
Though controversy remains, many Twitter users may feel less urgency to jump ship today than in late October.