Since acquiring Twitter,Seventeen (2019) Elon Musk maintained that one of his major objectives was to eliminate the bots.
Last night, Twitter did just that. One problem, though: The bots blocked are the good ones.
Numerous public service Twitter accounts have lost their ability to automatically post breaking news and events. Twitter has been removing API access, which allows many of these accounts to post in an authorized way by the platform, as it switchesto Musk's new high-priced paid API system.
Many of these affected Twitter accounts have automated updates, but aren't the type of hands-off bot accounts that some may think of when they hear the term "bot."
For example, numerous National Weather Service accounts that provide consistent updates, both automated and manually posted by humans, shared that they could no longer provide their up-to-the-minute, potentially life-saving updates.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Twitter is now limiting automated tweets and as a result this account can no longer auto post warnings as we have done so in the past," tweetedthe National Weather Service (NWS) Wilmington, OH account this morning. "We will continue to provide general updates, but always ensure that you have multiple means for receiving weather information & alerts."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"@Twitter is now limiting automated tweets and as a result, this account can no longer post all #Tsunami Warnings, Advisories, Watches, and Information Statements as they are issued," tweetedthe NWS Tsunami Alerts account. "We will make every effort to continue manual posts."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Other important services like the official account for the MTA, which runs New York City's public transit, and BART, which services San Francisco, shared similar issues with their access to Twitter's API.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Automated accounts, like @RabbitEveryHourand @SteamStatus, while not essential to public safety, also announced that they would no longer be able to post their entertaining or helpful content due to losing Twitter API access.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Some of these accounts could potentially run off of Twitter's new basic $100 per month API plan. However, this plan has very limited access and may not provide what some of these services require, especially when considering they use to be able to get everything they needed to basically provide Twitter with more content for free. After the $100 plan, Twitter's new API tiers start at a whopping $42,000 per month.
Many indie developers were affectedby these changes over the past few weeks. Some have had to close their Twitter-based apps due to the starting price for Enterprise API access being priced at $42,000 per month. Even services that wantedto pay, lost the ability to serve their customers as Twitter removed their API access without providing them any warning.
When Twitter introduced its new API plans, the company maintained it was to go after the bots. However, according to many developers, Twitter has refused to offer any lower-priced tiers somewhere between the $100 and $42,000 range. It appears that Musk's Twitter would like to broadly eliminate the vast majority of the Twitter third-party ecosystem.
But, why? That's still unclear.
Topics Social Media X/Twitter Elon Musk
The Gabby Douglas #Shero doll is the Barbie we desperately needRichard Branson champions the unique strengths of dyslexiaFacebook accused of targeting 'insecure' children and young people, report says'Game of Thrones' got some bad reviews back in the day, gets the last laughTeen cashes in on the perfect revenge after being dumped by prom dateThe parody accounts that make Twitter bearable in the era of TrumpIf you want to find real love, find yourself someone who loves HGTVYou would eat this pizza and you know itWhoops. Millions of Android phones are wide open to hackersYou would eat this pizza and you know it'Game of Thrones' star Nikolaj CosterTravis Scott fan breaks his leg after Scott urges him to jump from a balconyTwitter news video will appear 24/7, thanks to BloombergHey Radiohead, please tell us what this mysterious video meansSome users say their Samsung Galaxy S8 keeps restarting for no reasonTwitter now lets you search for emojiHere's Mark Zuckerberg totally 'not' campaigning in IndianaHere's Mark Zuckerberg totally 'not' campaigning in IndianaSome Apple Watch batteries are expanding for some reason, but don't panicKind strangers keep feeding Mark Zuckerberg VSCO's Montage lets you create video collages 'The Batman' reveals a sleek Batmobile that actually looks like a car 'Sustainable tourism' is not working. Here's how we can change that. Completely understandable reasons why Trump and I both won't release our tax returns Doc and Marty just had the most pure 'Back to the Future' reunion Injecting this sensor under your skin could prevent future pandemics Spotify, data, and how to become indispensable to the music industry How to clean every kind of smartphone case This Redditor is trolling the Conservatives with these sneaky websites Don't feel guilty for abandoning the books you've Instagrammed Uber's complicated, messy history with tipping Tire falls off a moving vehicle, bounces into a store, and hits 2 guys in the head Skier eats it going off a jump and flips 7 times before stopping 'No Time To Die' release delayed until November due to coronavirus The Trump administration has 10 important things to learn from teens who do Model UN TCL unveils trifold and rollable phone concepts (but don't expect them in stores anytime soon) Major domain name bug allowed hackers to register malicious domains We're not totally sure Trump knows who's leader of North Korea Twitter brings back special labels for profiles of political candidates Elon Musk says college is 'for fun,' addresses Starlink criticism
2.6073s , 8223.8203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Seventeen (2019)】,Unobstructed Information Network