All good things must come to an end—or at least become the subject of a scoldy Poynter article and a prominent New York Times tech reporter compiling a list of “issues and incidents.” In this case, the target is Clubhouse, a nascent audio-only conversation app that’s part-chatroom, part–conference panel, part–good happy hour, the kind where you leave feeling like your subway fare wasn’t wasted. The Poynter piece levies complaints and concerns at the app, including that “Clubhouse’s design inherently excludes people with certain disabilities” by making “zero affordances” for those who are deaf or hearing-impaired. (Unfortunately, it’s fairly impractical to make real-time audio apps both accessible and enjoyable to deaf people.) But Poynter quickly moves on to its more central concern, which is that the app poses a problem for fact-checkers since it “doesn’t keep old posts or audio files and doesn’t allow users to record conversations.” In fact, “there is no way to prove that someone said anything controversial at all,” the article notes, citing Grit Daily’s Olivia Smith. This seems like it would be bad for snitches and media industry narcs, » Read More
Journalists Worried About People Having Conversations on Clubhouse

- Categories: Clubhouse
Related Content
Disney Signs Music and Development Deal with Lenny Pearce for Disney+ | TheFutonCritic.com
By
Clubhouse App Editor
April 21, 2026
Toddler Techno Creator Lenny Pearce Signs Disney Music and Content Development Deal
By
Clubhouse App Editor
April 21, 2026
New Golf Simulator with Over 1,500 Courses Opens in Dyersville - 98.1 KHAK
By
Clubhouse App Editor
April 20, 2026
Royals' Clubhouse Questions Don't Excuse On-Field Problems - Yahoo Sports
By
Clubhouse App Editor
April 20, 2026
Houston Astros' Christian Vázquez is the clown of the clubhouse
By
Clubhouse App Editor
April 19, 2026