Zuckerberg Stole My Threads App

In November of 2021, I was brainstorming additional revenue options. I needed to generate cash because my main business focus, SecurePower.io, was being artificially suppressed by the A.S.S. The A.S.S. accomplished their virtual knee-capping of my business by hacking all of my phones and computers.

The idea that I explored in most detail was a messaging application. One of the names for the messaging applications was Threads.

For context, the Threads app from Meta was released on July 5, 2023. Meta employees started talking about a separate text-based app in November of 2022. Meta started working on the project which they dubbed P92 in January of 2023. P92 was to be a Twitter competitor. The original name according to Adam Mosseri, the head of Instagram, was Textagram – which is a very engineer-friendly name, but one that, in my humble opinion, would have doomed the app.

Around late 2021/early 2022, I was working out at the AVA gym. AVA is an apartment complex in downtown Los Angeles owned by AvalonBay Communities, Inc. I had sold my Mustang in October of 2021, and I was using that money to continue to work on building my company, Arbit LLC. In addition to building a company, I was still being hounded by the criminal enterprise that I refer to as the A.S.S., of which Mark Zuckerberg, my former employer, is a principal. On my phone, in the notes section, I had my business ideas.

I didn’t have iCloud set up, and at that time I didn’t know the A.S.S. could view my notes. I was wrong. But the A.S.S. is a highly sophisticated syndicate, one that has the resources of not just Mark Zuckerberg, but the resources of nations that are near-peers to the United States.

I thought I was alone in the gym the day the crime took place. The gym has video surveillance. The A.S.S. had access to this surveillance system. Based on their previous reconnaissance, the A.S.S. knew I was going to do flat bench dumbbell presses since the gym was empty and I didn’t have to fear anyone “accidentally” dropping a 45-pound plate on my face. They knew exactly how long it took me to do a set, and they practiced this crime to ensure success.

When I sat up after knocking out a set of 10, I was sure I was still alone because I didn’t hear either of the doors open. It’s a small gym that can easily get loud because of the two large glass walls that look out to the apartment complex’s lobby and Los Angeles Street. I had put my phone down on top of my backpack right next to me, but when I sat up the phone was gone. In its place was an opened pocket knife. The A.S.S. had stolen my phone.

Mr. Mosseri reports to Zuckerberg, not exactly a creative fellow, one who typically copies other people’s ideas – just as they have done with a Twitter clone. It’s not a big leap in logic that Zuckerberg chose Threads as the new app’s name. I don’t think he could have helped himself – for there was one more reason to choose the name Threads – domination.

Zuckerberg has been known to sit in meetings and just shout out “Domination!” In choosing Threads, he hoped to continue to dominate the social media market, and me, in particular.

In February of 2022, the A.S.S., who were working on and executing various plans to kill me and other methods of removing me from society, had two agents try to start a fight with me. When that failed, they told the apartment complex, the Los Angeles Police Department, and a Superior Court Judge (case# 22STUD00831), that I had pulled a knife on a guest and a pregnant female who lived in the apartment complex. They lied.

This set off six months of litigation that they purposely dragged out so that I would be consumed by it. In the meantime, the A.S.S. continued to swarm me – especially by the two people who lied and the pregnant female’s husband and the apartment manager and her husband who were in on the scheme. Other common criminals and foreign agents also played various roles. With my computers still hacked, my company continued to flounder despite my extensive marketing efforts.

Mark Zuckerberg has a history of stealing ideas. His rise to fame was based on copying the work of others. First, six months before Zuckerberg’s Facebook was started and eight months before ConnectU went online, Mark Zuckerberg used an application that was built by his friend, Aaron Greenspan. It was called houseSystem and in an email message that was circulated around campus that described its features it was referred to as “the Face Book.” The date of the email was four months before Zuckerberg started his own site, “thefacebook.com.” (John Markoff, The tangled history of Facebook)

Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss along with their partner Divya Narendra claimed that they were working on a social networking site, ConnectU, and asked Zuckerberg for help. But they allege that he stalled them to gain an unfair advantage as he built his own site. I believe them because stalling and willful incompetence have continued to be a classic Zuckerberg move – one he regularly deploys in litigation.

For example, on 02/09/23, a U.S. District Judge sanctioned Facebook and its legal team because they used unusually egregious and persistent tactics consisting of delays and willful incompetence. In my own lawsuit against Mark Zuckerberg, I have also experienced delays and willful incompetence, but now Zuckerberg is much more powerful, and his team is capable of corrupting judges and entire courthouses to do his bidding for him (link).

Zuckerberg never stopped copying other people’s work. Snapchat, Zuckeberg’s long-time competitor, has been copied many times by Facebook. In 2012, Facebook launched the Poke app for sending photo and video messages that disappeared within 10 seconds. Poke was shut down in 2014. In June of 2014, Facebook launched the Slingshot app which lets users send ephemeral messages. It was pulled in 2015. In 2015, Instagram launched the Bolt app, a service for disappearing messages before shutting it down soon after. In November 2015, Facebook tried out One-Hour Messages in Facebook Messenger which self-destruct after one hour. In June 2016, Facebook tried a News Feed-Only post feature. In July 2016, Facebook added Quick Updates which disappeared after 24 hours. Finally, Instagram Stories was launched as a copy of Snapchat Stories. (Kathleen Chaykowski, Facebook’s Rich History Of Copying Snapchat.)

Snapchat is not the only app that has been copied by Zuckerberg. Hashtags were first used by Twitter then Instagram and Facebook. Facebook Live was copied to compete against Twitter’s Periscope. And when TikTok came along, Instagram Reels was shipped to compete against this existential threat.

Zuckerberg graduated high school one year after I did, and I have to assume we experienced the early internet with some similarities. When I received an email from Facebook at my .edu address while I was studying engineering at ASU, I signed up because it was a walled garden. Nothing else about it was unique to me. I had MySpace, and before that I used instant messaging on AOL, and IRC was also popular. In high school, I was a daily lurker in an automotive forum. So it’s not like Facebook was a leap forward — it’s more of the winner by default. What I’m trying to say is that Mark Zuckerberg is not an innovator.

In December of 2023, I built an app and started a Mastodon server. I purchased the domain names SchmarkStalkerberg and ShmarkStalkerberg.com (I would have used threads, but that was already stolen). I had to shut down the server, and I could not launch the app because Zuckerberg and his gang had virtually enslaved me and I had no money. Without a computer that is not compromised, I can not make a single dollar.

The Fediverse is the latest threat to Zuckerberg’s digital empire. To deal with this threat he took a page from Microsoft and allowed people to share their Threads posts on other ActivityPub-compliant servers. The first act of the embrace, extend, and extinguish strategy has begun.

This year, I will sue Meta, and one of the causes of action will be for stealing Threads. Undoubtedly, Zuckerberg will continue to reach into his old bag of dirty tricks.


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