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Why is Twitter blocking Substack links?

The Twitter vs. Substack conflict persists as the social media platform appears to keep discouraging users from boosting offsite Substack posts by classifying all website links as “unsafe.”

The Verge noted that on April 7, Twitter seemed to add a warning advising users to avoid the platform and labeling them as potentially “spammy or unsafe” to all external Substack links.

substack
Image Source: bloomberg.com

Later, Elon Musk refuted reports that the website was obstructing Substack links. Then, Musk’s assertion that Substack was getting Twitter data beyond the parameters of its API database was denied by Substack co-founder Chris Best.

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He stated, “We feel we are in compliance with the terms, but if they have any specific concerns, we would love to know about them! We’d be happy to address any issues.”

The creators of Substack, Chris Best, Hamish McKenzie, and Jairaj Seth, expressed their disappointment with Twitter’s decision to limit writers’ ability to share their work in a statement to The Verge. They noted, “Writers should be able to freely distribute links to Substack and other websites.

This sudden shift serves as a reminder of the need for a paradigm that puts writers in control, compensates for excellent work, and safeguards free speech and the press. Their livelihoods shouldn’t be dependent on platforms where the rules can be altered at any time and where they don’t control their relationship with their audience, they continued.”

With the release of its new Notes feature earlier this week, the newsletter service appeared to throw the final switch against Twitter. This “recommendations” feed has a remarkable resemblance to the conventional, scrollable social feed that is the core of Twitter’s functionality.

Substack appeared to be offering options as users sought to abandon the Elon Musk-owned social networking platform, including a recently introduced chat feature that enables interaction between newsletter writers and subscribers. Twitter swiftly erected barriers to Substack boosters on the network, including the website’s official account.

The ability to embed tweets in stories was restricted by Twitter on Thursday. Shortly after, it appeared that tweets with links to Substack posts were no longer eligible for interaction, with users only able to quote tweet postings and no one else able to like or retweet them.

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In December, Musk stated that he believed “relentless advertising of competitors” to be a policy violation and barred sharing links to Mastodon, Instagram, Facebook, and other sites.

These limitations, however, were later lifted. Although it is important to note that, for the time being at least, users are still able to tweet a Substack link, it is likely that he has decided to restore it now that he considers that Substack is attempting to compete with Twitter. Anyone attempting to follow it will only need to click through the warning to access the content.

Twitter

Twitter Says Parts of Its Source Code Were Leaked Online

According to court documents, portions of the software code that runs Twitter were stolen online, posing the biggest challenge for the social networking platform since Elon Musk’s turbulent $44 billion acquisition of the business late the year before.

Twitter
Image Source: upi.com

According to the documents, on March 24, Twitter served a lawsuit on the website GitHub after discovering that a user going by the name “FreeSpeechEnthusiast” had uploaded unauthorized portions of Twitter’s source code there.

Also Read: Twitter to Begin Culling Legacy Verified Marks From April 1

According to Twitter’s legal representative, the aim of the lawsuit is to locate the person who distributed the code. The paperwork was received by The U.S. District Court, Northern District, California.

The firm told CNBC that GitHub responded to Twitter’s request & erased the code the following day. As per a corporate representative, in the spirit of openness, the business discloses all DMCA takedowns, which happen when something is taken down from a site at the demand of a copyright owner.

Comment requests from Twitter did not right away receive a response.

Musk has already asserted that on March 31 Twitter will make the code used to suggest tweets publicly available. He claimed that he anticipates that people would discover silly problems and that initially disclosing the source code will be very embarrassing.

Our “algorithm” is overly complex & not fully understood internally. People will discover many silly things, but we’ll patch issues as soon as they’re found! We’re developing a simplified approach to serve more compelling tweets, but it’s still a work in progress. That’ll also be open source. Providing code transparency will be incredibly embarrassing at first, but it should lead to rapid improvement in recommendation quality. Most importantly, we hope to earn your trust.” He said in a tweet.

Source: shrty.rf.gd

“GitHub does not generally comment on decisions to remove content. However, in the interest of transparency, we share every DMCA [Digital Millennium Copyright Act] takedown request publicly,” a GitHub spokesperson told the BBC.

Source: bbc.com

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Elon Musk, a billionaire who purchased Twitter last October for $44 billion and afterward took the firm private, faces new difficulties as a result of the leak. Ever since it has descended into disarray as a result of widespread layoffs and the exodus of advertising.

As per documents disclosed in a congressional report, the Federal Trade Commission is looking into Musk’s mass firings at Twitter and attempting to access his private communications as a part of its ongoing investigation into the social networking firm’s privacy as well as cybersecurity practices.

Twitter

Twitter to Begin Culling Legacy Verified Marks From April 1

Next week, Twitter will start removing the legacy verified marks from user profiles. The company is moving towards a system where only paid subscribers and people who are part of approved organizations have that status.

Since November 2022, Twitter Blue members may also show the blue “verified” checkmark on their profiles. “Legacy verified” accounts on Twitter are those that had already been verified under the prior system. Twitter announced in a tweet on Thursday that the move to eliminate legacy verification will start on April 1.

Twitter
Image Source: japantimes.co.jp

According to the website, on April 1st, it “will start winding down [its] legacy verified program and removing legacy verified checkmarks.” It was always clear that the company wanted to do this.

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Elon Musk, the CEO of Twitter, stated that “far too many corrupt legacy Blue’verification’ checkmarks exist” and that the business is going to eliminate them in the upcoming months shortly after Twitter Blue was first introduced in November 2022.

The blue verification mark has become a key component of Twitter’s Twitter Blue subscription service, which Musk initially priced at $8 per month and now touts as the best method to use and advance the service. More paying subscribers, according to Musk, would also help to fix Twitter’s bot issue. According to the company, paying Blue users receive greater priority in searches and replies, which helps combat spam and scams. Additionally, they can edit tweets and get receive much fewer ads.

Just as Twitter Blue subscriptions went global, Twitter made a statement regarding legacy verified users. With this rollout, the service will be available to more people than it was previously. Paying subscribers will also receive a blue tick, have access to 4,000-character tweets, be able to edit their tweets, and benefit from better reply rankings.

If the company wants to reach Musk’s objective of having half of its income come from subscriptions, it must increase the availability of Blue. We’ll just have to see whether or not there are enough customers ready to pay the $8 monthly fee (or $11 if they pay via the iOS app) for its benefits.

Numerous journalists and public personalities are among those designated as verified without the Twitter Blue subscription. During the years that Twitter operated without Musk, this blue tick system assisted in establishing the veracity of assertions and reports emanating from those profiles and elevated Twitter to the status of a reliable news source.

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Musk’s hatred for the old system has frequently been expressed in light of his contempt for journalists, who have frequently been the busiest verified users on Twitter. After largely ignoring journalist inquiries in previous months, Musk this month set the press@twitter.com email account to automatically reply with a poop emoji.

Twitter

Jack Dorsey’s New ‘Decentralized’ Twitter Hits the App Store

More beta testers are getting access to Bluesky, the Twitter substitute supported by Jack Dorsey, co-founder and CEO of Twitter. Even though the application is still only accessible via invite, its appearance on the App Store suggests that a public debut may be close.

Initially intended to be a “decentralized social network” and a Twitter extension, Bluesky eventually split off to create its own network.

Twitter
Image Source: coinscreed.com

Early in the previous year, the company made the announcement that it had become independent, writing on Twitter, “Both Twitter and Bluesky realized that our independence is important to the success of the project, which is why we established an independent company to ensure that we serve the broadest possible interests.”

Also Read: Twitter Cuts More Engineering, and Product Jobs to Curb Costs

Last year, Bluesky reported receiving $13 million to guarantee it had the autonomy and liberty to begin working on R&D. It also mentioned having Jack Dorsey on its board of directors. Furthermore, it stated that the funding provided by Twitter to Bluesky was “not subject to any conditions except one: that Bluesky was to research and develop technologies that enable open and decentralized public conversation.”

Authenticated Transfer Protocol, or AT, is Bluesky’s primary focus, and the Bluesky mobile app functions as a demonstration of the protocol in use. AT gives users the ability to build a federated, decentralized social network in a manner akin to the ActivityPub system that powers Mastodon.

The project has drawn some criticism, particularly from Mastodon and other devs who noted that ActivityPub, a suggested W3C standard, already drives a sizable and expanding “Fediverse” of connected servers. And since Musk bought Twitter, Mastodon, an open-source, decentralized alternative, has been growing in popularity among Twitter users who switched to the fediverse.

Users who want to participate can send their emails to be added to a waiting list and download the Beta app from the App Store, which is available only by invitation.

The interface of Bluesky, according to TechCrunch, is similar to that of Twitter with a few minor variations, such as asking “What’s up?” in the text box rather than “What’s happening,” but it simplifies it through the addition of a plus icon to add 256 characters with the feature to add pictures.

Moving to Bluesky might be seen as a hassle given the destruction of much more than a decade’s worth of tweets, recollections, and hot takes, leading users to wonder why they should do so. In 2021, during the Twitter ban imposed by then-president Donald Trump, Dorsey began pushing the concept of Bluesky. He challenged if the suspension was the best course of action.

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An open and free global internet can’t be eroded by these things, according to Dorsey, who also argued that the platform should examine how its service might encourage damage and diversion.

Dorsey stated that he thought Bluesky would separate from Twitter in a manner that would slow content moderation on larger platforms and lessen their influence over who is in charge of moderating that content.

Twitter

Twitter Cuts More Engineering, and Product Jobs to Curb Costs

Twitter Corporation fired more employees late Saturday in a new round of cost-cutting measures at the social media corporation presently controlled by Elon Musk.

As per individuals acquainted with the matter, the layoffs affected staff members across the corporation, such as engineering as well as the product. Some employees were informed of their dismissal via email late Saturday, according to the sources, while others learned of their dismissal when they were unable to enter the internal network.

Twitter
Image Source: gulfbusiness.com

It’s uncertain how many staff members were affected, but dozens, according to sources. The Information priorly stated that more than 50 people had been laid off.

Read More: Twitter to start charging developers for API access

Outside of normal working hours, Twitter did not reply to a request for comment from Bloomberg News.

Esther Crawford who was one of the chief executive officers of Twitter Blue, the app’s subscription plan, was one of the employees let go, Platformer’s Zoe Schiffer disclosed in a tweet on Sunday.

In the days that followed Musk’s acquisition of Twitter last year, she famously posted on Twitter a famous post that staff members will often have to #SleepWhereYouWork to stay on schedule and fulfill deadlines.

Crawford wasn’t quick to react to a comment request which was sent out after normal business hours.

A few young entrepreneurs who entered Twitter through takeovers in recent years, along with the founders of the newsletter enterprise Revue as well as the design company Ueno, wrote on Twitter on Sunday that they, too, had been fired.

Originally, Twitter avoided laying off founders to avoid having to accelerate the disbursement of greater stock grants, according to people who are acquainted with the business.

According to three persons acquainted with the compensation packages, several pioneers got additional compensation packages as a result of the purchase of their businesses, presumably raising the cost to fire them off because their stock and incentives are compensated out.

Read More: Will Twitter now start charging for SMS two-factor authentication?

Saturday’s other round of job cuts was the biggest as Mr. Elon Musk informed staff members in late November at a meeting held internally that there were no further intentions for job cuts.

The layoffs accompanied a widespread layoff at the start of November when Mr. Elon Musk fired roughly half of Twitter’s working population just a week after taking over the corporation.

Elon Musk cut over 3,700 job positions at Twitter the previous year, which represents fifty percent of the firm’s workforce, in an attempt at cost reduction succeeding his $44 billion takeover.

two-factor authentication

Will Twitter now start charging for SMS two-factor authentication?

According to Twitter’s announcement on Friday, only Twitter Blue subscribers will have access to text messages as a two-factor authentication process.

The change will happen on March 20. Two additional free options for Twitter log-in authentication will be available to users: a security key and an authentication mobile app.

two-factor authentication
Image Source: techspot.com

Users that utilize two-factor authentication, or 2FA, must first input their password and then a security code to access their accounts. This is one of the main ways users keep their Twitter accounts secure.

Also Read: Why suddenly are Twitter feeds flooded with Elon Musk’s tweets?

The company noted, “While historically a popular form of 2FA, unfortunately, we have seen phone-number-based 2FA be used – and abused – by bad actors. So starting today, we will no longer allow accounts to enroll in the text message/SMS method of 2FA unless they are Twitter Blue subscribers.”

Users who subscribe to Twitter Blue get a blue checkmark on their account. For Android and iOS users, the monthly subscription fee is $11. According to a Twitter account security assessment, only 2.6% of Twitter users had 2FA activated as of 2021, and of those, 74.4% used SMS authentication.

Nonsubscribers of Twitter Blue will have 30 days to stop utilizing the text authentication option and join up for another 2FA sign-in option, according to Twitter. According to Twitter, deactivating text message 2FA won’t immediately separate the user’s mobile number from their account. Musk replied “Yup” to a tweet that claimed Twitter lost $60 million annually “to Pump 2FA SMS”.

SIM hacking—where “bad actors” obtain access to users’ accounts by taking their phone numbers and impersonating them to be them—is a widespread occurrence, making the SMS method one of the least secure kinds of two-factor authentication. In 2019, the method was used to effectively hack Jack Dorsey, the co-founder and former CEO of Twitter.

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One user commented that they “don’t think the site has had a single positive change” after Elon acquired it for $44 billion and seized control of the massive social media corporation. Online reactions have varied from amazement to dismissal.

Musk stated earlier this week via video conference at the Global Government Summit in Dubai that he is still considering leaving his position as Twitter’s CEO and “guesses” he will find a successor before the end of 2023. Musk stated. “I think I need to stabilize the organization and just make sure it’s in a financially healthy place in that the product roadmap is clearly laid out.

I’m guessing probably towards the end of the year would be good timing to find someone else to run the company. I think it should be in a stable position at the end of this year.”