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#TwitterDown: Elon Musk announces temporary read limits on Twitter

Dollhouse

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https://edition.cnn.com/2023/07/01/tech/...index.html

Twitter users in several countries faced difficulties accessing the social media site on Saturday. The top trending topics on the app in the US were "Rate Limit Exceeded" and "#TwitterDown." Elon Musk, the owner of Twitter, announced that temporary limits were imposed due to data scraping and system manipulation. Verified accounts had a limit of 6,000 posts per day, while unverified accounts were limited to 600. Musk later increased the limits to 8,000 tweets per day for verified users. Many users expressed frustration with the connection problems, and other trending topics included "Wtf twitter" and "Thanks Elon." The previous day, Twitter seemed to restrict access for non-logged-in users. Similar service disruptions occurred in March, and Musk is trying to revitalize the platform by bringing in a new CEO.

Do you still use Twitter? I do and this sucks...
 
What a :censored: moron this guy is.
 
That's his $44B social media flop right there. Time for him to go.
 
Will this be the death of Twitter? Honestly, I'm ready for it. Let's go back to forums :D
 
Will this be the death of Twitter? Honestly, I'm ready for it. Let's go back to forums :D
And possibly be the death of Elon Musk's ownership. 🤣
 
I use Twitter. :)
I went back to Twitter because Mastodon, Tribel and other alternatives were even worse cesspools of conformity than Twitter had been pre-Musk.
 
Will this be the death of Twitter? Honestly, I'm ready for it. Let's go back to forums :D

Between that mess with Reddit and Twitter, and FB this is a sentiment I have seen very often.. so I wouldn't be surprised if we have seen a resurgence.

At any rate, I read that he actually DDoSed himself as a negotiation tactic with Google.

We'll see if it works.
 
No wonder reddit is becoming more popular these days. I expect twitter to die sometime soon. I wouldn't be surprised if all the employees one day decided to leave due to the chaos and the company would be the laughing stock of all companies let alone all tech companies out there :happydance:
 
I wouldnt go that far. Reddit has been subject to a massive protest because of their decision to charge for API access. I mean it is exorbitantly expensive, and the owner has been forcing people to end their protests by threatening them by having a mod they appoint reopen and then run their reddit.

This was done because the protests were affecting their plan to go public in the future..
 
I wouldnt go that far. Reddit has been subject to a massive protest because of their decision to charge for API access. I mean it is exorbitantly expensive, and the owner has been forcing people to end their protests by threatening them by having a mod they appoint reopen and then run their reddit.

This was done because the protests were affecting their plan to go public in the future..
Oh I wasn't aware of that - thanks for sharing! I'm afraid I don't know why a non-Reddit employee would need API access. Reddit is a forum community.

Please correct me if I've misunderstood something :)

All I know is ppl complaining about "unfair" Reddit bans but obviously, it's human nature to blame others even if it's the person's fault, right? :P
 
No problem, glad to help. :)

Anyway, if you are a developer you would need it for your app. Most third party apps are actually better than the official apps. I personally use Relay Pro having switched from BaconReader years ago.

And they certainly have more features, even ones for privacy than the originals themselves.. and are often preferred over the originals for that reason.

So I wouldn't be surprised if this was a factor in the owner's decision to charge for Reddits API use.. but it is still no reason to be threatening the very people who keep your site active with their content.. especially since leaving and starting your own community is an option too.
 
No problem, glad to help. :)

Anyway, if you are a developer you would need it for your app. Most third party apps are actually better than the official apps. I personally use Relay Pro having switched from BaconReader years ago.

And they certainly have more features, even ones for privacy than the originals themselves.. and are often preferred over the originals for that reason.

So I wouldn't be surprised if this was a factor in the owner's decision to charge for Reddits API use.. but it is still no reason to be threatening the very people who keep your site active with their content.. especially since leaving and starting your own community is an option too.
Sorry, I assumed you meant the API software developers for reddit use.
After clearing my head I realised this is about software developers wanting to access reddit api as a third party api to gather info, just as any other api e.g. weather api, imdbd api, etc.


It’s not a blanket policy change. As reported by The New York Times, Reddit’s API will remain free to developers who want to build apps and bots that help people use Reddit, as well as to researchers who wish to study Reddit for strictly academic or noncommercial purposes.

But companies that “crawl” Reddit for data and “don’t return any of that value” to users will have to pay up,” Reddit co-founder and CEO Steve Huffman told The Times.
Personally? I don't see why anyone would have a reason to access the reddit API unless they're trying to help reddit out. I may be wrong though. Do you have any ideas? I'm always always to new thoughts and suggestions. I'm probably being stupid :P

BUT... I disagree with your view that reddit usage is likely to decrease as a result. The change is unlikely to affect normal users. Perhaps i've missed something. I'd love to hear your POV on this - I could be wrong :)
 
I wasnt talking about the normal users, what is likely to affect them would be how they are treated while there, and that is usually the case anywhere..

Who wants to stick around at a place where they are mistreated? I sure wouldn't and it wouldn't matter if I was regular user, or community admin.

So sure, the API thing isn't likely to affect the average person, but chances are, if the beloved community there were once apart of suffers, and the community admin decided to move on to their own service, then the user who loved that place, would be likely to follow. This would also be the case if they disagreed with how Reddit's owner had treated these admins over this situation.
 
I wasnt talking about the normal users, what is likely to affect them would be how they are treated while there, and that is usually the case anywhere..

Who wants to stick around at a place where they are mistreated? I sure wouldn't and it wouldn't matter if I was regular user, or community admin.

So sure, the API thing isn't likely to affect the average person, but chances are, if the beloved community there were once apart of suffers, and the community admin decided to move on to their own service, then the user who loved that place, would be likely to follow. This would also be the case if they disagreed with how Reddit's owner had treated these admins over this situation.
I'm not sure if I misunderstand your post, but if developers are developing FOR reddit and thereby helping reddit, they will be exempt from having to pay. :)
 
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