If Twitter is done, so is our access to immediate information EDIT: It's Over

The Half-Blood FKA Prince

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It takes time to build what Twitter is, not Twitter 1.0 but the one we have access to today. Anybody can throw some code held together by a stick of big red and a purple glue stick, even sink all the money in the world for advertising, nobody is sticking around

Anyone trying to replace Twitter at the bare minimum has to do what it does well and do things it doesn't exceptionally. So it takes time.

The problem is Twitter might not make it until Bluesky takes off or Mastodon gets its act together, although more and more officials and businesses are creating accounts over there, they're only there until the real replacement shows up
Yeah that makes sense. I would imagine if it was simple there would be a lot more competition. And if twitter sold for 44 BILLION, i cant imagine too many people, especially private citizens having the funds or even the means to raise them for such a complicated, time consuming and expensive project.

Considering the premise of this thread however, with a site like twitter being so crucial to society, one would think the gov would be more inclined to either pass some sort of legislation or use their relatively bottomless grab bag power and taxpayer money to personally take on and expedite the process of building and running this replacement and giving it a gov domain.

Just goes to $how who really run$ thi$ country:mjpls:
 

The Half-Blood FKA Prince

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I'm glad you explained it the way you did because I couldn't.
Yeah my bad i didnt mean that to come off so condescending. I have been wondering for a while now why no one had thought of this, particularly one of us. Breh explained it very well though, and it makes sense now. As i said, my tech skills peaked around the dawn of social media.

To this day i can not even navigate any of these sites for shyt. Let alone fathom what is involved in creating one:mjlol: Damn it sucks getting old.
 

UpNext

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The reason the Tory Lanez trial thread is doing numbers the way it is because of all the Twitter threads updating daily. Majority of the info posted from the trial are Twitter links.
So you're saying without Twitter people wouldn't be as invested in that dumbass trial. How's that a bad thing?
 

bnew

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Anger over Turkey's temporary Twitter block during quake rescue​

By Daren Butler
and Orhan Coskun

Aftermath of the deadly earthquake in Kahramanmaras


[1/3] People carry the body of a victim removed from under the rubble in the aftermath of a deadly earthquake in Kahramanmaras, Turkey February 9, 2023. REUTERS/Stoyan Nenov/File Photo
  • Summary
  • Companies
  • Twitter plays key role in sharing of quake aid information
  • Official says block addressed untrue claims, insults
  • Ankara says Twitter pledged support vs disinformation
  • Turkey passed law to combat 'disinformation' last October
ISTANBUL, Feb 9 (Reuters) - Turkey's decision to block access to Twitter for about 12 hours from Wednesday afternoon to early Thursday as people scrambled to find loved ones after devastating earthquakes has compounded public frustration at the pace of relief efforts.

Opposition leaders and social media users criticised the throttling of the platform, which has helped people share information on arriving aid and the location of those still trapped in rubble after the initial tremor on Monday.


President Tayyip Erdogan's government has blocked social media in the past and focused in recent months on fighting what it calls "disinformation", which it said prompted the block on Wednesday.

It restored full access to Twitter early on Thursday as the quake's death toll in Turkey and neighbouring Syria shot past 17,000.

President Tayyip Erdogan's government "lost its mind and... the result is cries for help being heard less. We know everything you're trying to hide," main opposition CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu said after the block was imposed on Wednesday afternoon.

Latest Updates​

A government official who requested anonymity said the move had temporarily interrupted real calls for help, but that action was taken quickly and the service returned to normal.

"This had to be done because in some accounts there were untrue claims, slander, insults and posts with fraudulent purposes," the official told Reuters, citing efforts to steal money under the pretense of collecting aid.

Turkish officials held talks with Twitter on Wednesday and said they expected cooperation in fighting disinformation during relief work, Deputy Transport Minister Omer Fatih Sayan said.


Erdogan's communications director, Fahrettin Altun, said Twitter cooperated in the meeting and pledged to support Turkey's efforts, and officials look forward to working with it "over the next few days and weeks".

"Disinformation is humanity's common enemy and a grave threat to democracy, social peace, and national security," he said on Twitter on Thursday.

Last October, Turkey's parliament adopted a law under which journalists and social media users could be jailed for up to three years for spreading "disinformation", raising concerns among rights groups and European countries about free speech.

Erdogan's ruling party had said a law was needed to tackle false accusations on social media, and it would not silence opposition. The issue is of growing significance with elections scheduled to be held by the middle of this year.

A Reuters investigation last summer showed how the mainstream media has become a tight chain of command of government-approved headlines, while the smaller independent and opposition media face the brunt of regulatory penalties.

The Twitter block also drew an angry response from opposition DEVA party leader Ali Babacan, a former economy minister and Erdogan ally.

"How can Twitter be blocked on a day when communication is saving lives? What sort of ignorance this," Babacan said late on Wednesday.

The pro-Kurdish HDP party said Twitter had played a crucial role in organizing aid for those affected by the quakes and that blocking social media would only cause more death.
 
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Been seeing a lot of weirdos post fake news about the Earthquake saying NATO has tectonic weapons and did it to punish Turkiye
 

concise

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Twitter came around in 2006, our access to reliable information worked good enough in the days before that.
North America’s largest transportation network suspended the use of Twitter for service alerts Thursday, saying the “reliability of the platform can no longer be guaranteed.”

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which serves 15.3 million passengers across a 5,000 square-mile area surrounding New York City, Long Island, New York State and Connecticut, also said their access to Twitter through its Application Programming Interface (API) was involuntarily interrupted twice over the last two weeks.

“The MTA does not pay tech platforms to publish service information and has built redundant tools that provide service alerts in real time,” MTA’s Acting Chief Customer Officer Shanifah Rieara said in a statement. “Those include the MYmta and TrainTime apps, the MTA’s homepage at MTA.info, email alerts and text messages.”


Saying that twitter is NEEDED is demonstrably wrong.
 

bnew

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New York City Subway Ends Twitter Service Alerts After Musk Raises Price​

  • Twitter had asked for $50,000 a month for API: MTA official
  • Decision comes as MTA eyes $600 million shortfall this year
Commuters wait on the platform of a subway station in New York.

Commuters wait on the platform of a subway station in New York.
Photographer: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg
By
Skylar Woodhouse and
Michelle Kaske
April 27, 2023 at 6:04 PM EDT

New York City’s mass-transit system is ending its real-time service alerts on Twitter for subway, train and bus riders as the Metropolitan Transportation Authority curbs its relationship with the platform owned by Elon Musk.

Twitter had asked the MTA to pay $50,000 a month to continue accessing the platform’s application programming interface, or API, an infrastructure tool that allows for multiple computer programs to work together, according to an MTA official. Twitter didn’t specifically respond to an emailed request for comment.

“I don’t think it would be the best use of resources, especially when we have these other features and functions that are internal and homegrown and that are reliable that we want our customers to use,” Shanifah Rieara, MTA’s acting chief customer officer and senior advisor, said in a telephone interview. “We want to communicate with our customers through all platforms, but we need a platform that is reliant and consistent and up to date.”

MTA’s Twitter accounts that offered real time service updates to riders, including @NYCTSubway, @NYCTBus, @LIRR and @MetroNorth, will no longer be used to push out communication like service alerts to riders, according to the transit system. Transit system employees will still monitor those handles and respond to social media messages. There’s no planned change to @MTA account.


Read more: NYC Subway Alerts at Risk Under Twitter Plan to Make MTA Pay

Twitter had announced that it would suspend its access to its API on Feb. 9 but then said a new paid tier structure to use it would go into effect at the end of March, according to the MTA. Twitter didn’t offer a time line for when older accounts would lose access, the agency said.

The MTA has a $600 million budget deficit this year that’s set to grow to $3 billion in 2025 as federal pandemic aid runs out. The state agency is hoping that a plan by New York Governor Kathy Hochul and state legislators will help curb the system’s financial challenges.

Riders on subways, buses and commuter rails can still get real-time service information on MTA’s phone apps, MYmta and TrainTime, its website and on WhatsApp.
 

AquaCityBoy

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fukk a Twitter
full


One of the best decisions Elon has made is driving that site into the ground. I only wish he would do it faster. 🙏🏿
 
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