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Triller, the next Tik Tok?

As we all know, TikTok boomed like never before. After two years of steady rise, the Chinese-owned platform broke through the two-billion download mark in the first quarter of 2020, bringing all ages into a previously Gen Z-dominated space. More eyes led to more scrutiny, and everyone from popular TikTokers to the platform's own country of origin has come under increased fire.

Four of TikTok's most-popular creators announced that they're leaving the platform, citing security and privacy concerns, according to the Los Angeles Times. Josh Richards, Griffin Johnson, Noah Beck, and Anthony Reeves — of Sway House fame — are leaving TikTok and encouraging their combined following of nearly 50 million to join them on Triller, a competing short-form video app.

Not only are they leaving TikTok for Triller, but they're now on Triller's payroll: Josh Richards, who has 251,800 followers on Triller, will now act as chief strategy officer. Noah Beck, Griffin Johnson, and Anthony Reeves signed on as investors and equity shareholders, according to the Times.

Triller was first introduced in 2015 as a "game-changing music video maker app." You can record yourself lip-synching or performing a song, then utilise the app's "editing algorithm that uses intelligent audio and facial analysis to decide when to cut." In other words, you perform and the app edits your video for you. At first, users were encouraged to share their final product on social media, but a year in, the app added follow buttons and explore pages to turn the editing app into a social platform. Refinery29 reached out to Triller for comment and will update this story if we hear back.

In the race to de-throne TikTok, competitors like Byte and Facebook's Reels have all been known to lure former Vine stars or popular TikTok creators to their platforms via financial incentives — this Triller news is probably the first of a series of similar announcements.

Richards, Johnson, and Beck all shared videos of themselves together wearing matching Triller shirts, announcing the transition on both their Trillers and TikToks, and the three are prominently featured on Triller's popular user section.

There are videos on TikTok from as early as 2018 — the year TikTok was introduced to the U.S. via Musical.ly — where creators share their Triller videos. At the time, this might've signalled the kind of cross-pollination that made Instagram popular on Facebook and made Musical.ly popular thanks to Vine. In any case, the fact that Triller's visibility is largely catapulted by TikTok stars is just a testament to TikTok's place in our culture.