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Twitter Changes Continue, As The CoTweet Feature Will Be Removed After Less Than...

 1 year ago
source link: https://www.slashgear.com/1184558/twitter-changes-continue-as-the-cotweet-feature-will-be-removed-after-less-than-a-year/
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Twitter Changes Continue, As The CoTweet Feature Will Be Removed After Less Than A Year

Twitter blue smartphone
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By Dave McQuilling/Jan. 31, 2023 6:01 pm EST

Twitter has gotten interesting in the months following Elon Musk's takeover. There was a lot of behind-the-scenes stuff that drew most of the media attention, but changes were also being made to the platform itself. Some features were removed, others altered, and new ones were added. Some were genuine attempts at improving the platform, while others were designed to make Musk's $8-per-month premium service Twitter Blue more appealing. Others sounded pretty good on paper but didn't really work out. CoTweets was one of those features.

The idea was pretty simple: if two accounts wanted to put their weight behind a single message, they could CoTweet it. It would appear on both of their timelines and be attributed to both tweeters. Select accounts in the United States, Canada, and South Korea had access to the feature and could invite other accounts to CoTweet with them. There were also a couple of unique considerations with CoTweets. 

Firstly, they couldn't be edited; the CoTweet would have to be deleted and republished if the authors wanted to make changes. Twitter recommended users collaborate via DM so they agreed on the content of a CoTweet before an invite was sent. Users could also change their minds after a CoTweet was published and remove their names from it. Doing this would simply turn it into a regular tweet by the remaining author. The tweets were also limited to two users, so you couldn't CoTweet with three or more people. Times have changed, though, and starting today you can't CoTweet with anyone.

CoTweeting ends, but it could be back

Twitter icon on phone
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Twitter has announced that the CoTweet feature has been removed following its initial testing period. The CoTweets that have already been posted aren't disappearing straight away, but they will "revert to retweets" in a month's time, according to the company. It's not explicitly stated how the reversion will work, but looking at the other CoTweet rules, it seems the original author who sent the invite will have the tweet on their timeline, and the person who accepted the invite will have a retweet of that tweet. It isn't all doom and gloom, though. 

There is a chance CoTweets could make a comeback at some point. The statement on Twitter's CoTweet FAQs page thanks the people who tested the feature over the last several months for their feedback. It then goes on to state, "we're still looking for ways to implement this feature moving forward." So CoTweets are gone for now, but they may not actually be gone for good.

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All The Ways Twitter Has Already Changed Under Elon Musk

Elon Musk speaking at an event
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By Nadeem Sarwar/Oct. 28, 2022 8:34 pm EST

Elon Musk is now the master of Twitter, a platform that he sees as the de facto public town square, and which he aims to turn into a free-speech utopia. However, Musk's takeover has been met with a rather vocal, but divisive, reaction. For folks that see him as a visionary, they are already predicting a revival of Twitter's fortunes, both as a product and a business. The likes of Mark Cuban, at least, think that way.

Others say Musk will drive the platform to the ground because of his inexperience running a company that is more politically sensitive and administratively entangled than any business he has run before. Then there's the concern about Musk's impact on steering the discourse on Twitter in the immediate future.

Whether he maintains its neutrality while bolstering free speech remains to be seen. How will he manage the conflict of interests while also serving as the chief of Tesla, when rival carmakers already advertise on Twitter? Will Twitter see an exodus of influential people under Musk's lordship? A lot has happened in the past few weeks.

Start the job with house cleaning

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It is not a strange phenomenon to see a new owner cleaning the board and other C-suite executives after acquiring a company. Musk proved no different. Soon after news broke that Musk has finally signed the papers and has officially become the "chief twit," it was revealed that Musk had fired CEO Parag Agrawal, who took over the helm from co-founder and former CEO Jack Dorsey.

Musk had no special fondness for Agrawal and even challenged him to a debate publicly on Twitter over the platform's real user engagement and bot figures. Musk also laid off Twitter's top policy and legal executive Vijaya Gadde. Gadde is said to have been the architect behind suspending Donald Trump's account, a decision that Musk classified as "flat-out stupid."

Chief Financial Officer Ned Segal was also fired, alongside General Counsel at Twitter, Sean Edgett. There are also reports floating around that Musk is reshuffling the core engineering team at Twitter, and has also brought in Tesla's engineering team for an analysis.

Twitter waves goodbye to the stock exchange

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One of the earliest grievances that Musk had with Twitter was the inability to take hard decisions, and that's because it has a public company where investors' will reigned supreme. Even Jack Dorsey reportedly confided as much in Musk, and the latter expressed publicly that Twitter needs to be taken private to take the heavy-hitting decisions that could inject fresh energy into the platform.

Well, now that Musk has paid his $44 billion with help from banks and a few very rich friends, the billionaire is taking Twitter private. Twitter has already filed Form 25 before the US SEC, an agency that Musk is not really fond of. The SEC, in turn, has directed the New York Stock Exchange to delist TWTR from its registry when trading begins on the morning of November 8, 2022.

Now, Musk will no longer have to release quarterly earnings reports publicly and field questions from investors. Twitter is effectively a closed book from a financial transparency perspective, and the only parties that will be privy to any such information will be supporting bank entities like Morgan Stanley, which need their fat interest in return for staking $13 billion in debt towards the purchase.

No plans of unbanning hellraisers

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Musk isn't a fan of permanent bans, and has expressed his displeasure in the past over the suspension of Donald Trump's account. With Twitter now under his sole ownership, there was strong speculation that he would bring back the de-platformed personalities like Trump and Alex Jones. That won't happen any time soon, it seems.

Musk says he will soon form a "content moderation council with widely diverse viewpoints" that will take a look at all moderation and policy enforcement-related affairs. He tweeted that no decisions related to reinstating a banned account will be taken before a meeting of this council, adding that so far there are no changes from the existing Twitter policies.

To be super clear, we have not yet made any changes to Twitter’s content moderation policies https://t.co/k4guTsXOIu

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) October 29, 2022

Details are thin on whether this council will consist of independent experts — the way Meta's Oversight Board operates — or if it only accepts in-house legal and policy experts from within the ranks of Twitter employees. Either way, the stakes are high, especially with Musk sitting at the top and his shifting geopolitical inclinations from time to time.

A surge in right-wing influence

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"The reason I acquired Twitter is because it is important to the future of civilisation to have a common digital town square, where a wide range of beliefs can be debated in a healthy manner," Musk recently said of the deal. However, the news of his takeover has found a celebratory tone in the right wing circle, and dejection from those on the left side of the political ideology. There are numbers that suggest such a reality.

According to an analysis, accounts of popular far-right figures such as Lauren Boebert and Kari Lake have seen their follower growth shoot up by as much as 1,200% in the past 24 hours. The accounts in question are well-known for spreading hateful discourse and disinformation, which is an alarming trend.

The spike in popularity of these popular far-right accounts can not be conclusively linked to Musk's takeover of the platform. However, the sudden spurt in popularity due to fresh Twitter accounts aligns with the window when the final formalities that handed over total control of Twitter in the hands of Elon Musk, concluded.

Tesla rivals are on the fence

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Elon Musk is now the simultaneous owner of Twitter — a plum place for advertising — and Tesla, the world's largest electric car brand. So, it was always a natural question for Tesla rivals to do a double-take about advertising on a platform owned by Musk. The concerns about accessing a neutral online platform are legitimate. What if Musk algorithmically suppresses their ads? What if Tesla ads on Twitter get an unfair advantage?

Earlier today, French carmaker Citroen shared a cheeky tweet that said "Hello to the social media platform owned by one of our competitors." The tweet set the tone for a serious debate that eventually snowballed into a realistic business and landed at the doorsteps of General Motors.

GM has now put a hold on advertising its goods and services on Twitter. The company will continue to rely on Twitter for resolving customer queries, but it won't be paying for ads on the platform for an undisclosed duration. It would be interesting to see if automakers decide to altogether shun their brand presence on Twitter, especially the likes of Ford and Stellantis that are increasingly competing against Tesla in the EV game.

Exodus of influential personalities

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Ever since Musk first declared that he had purchased a majority stake in Twitter, which eventually transformed into full-house ownership, numerous influential personalities have expressed intent of waving goodbye to Twitter, fearing where the platform was headed under Musk's leadership.

Ken Olin, executive producer of NBC drama "This Is Us" announced his exit from Twitter with a tweet that said "I'm out of here. No judgement," further adding that "Let's protect our democracy." According to The Hollywood Reporter, Alex Winter of the "Bill & Ted" movie fame and co-writer of "Ocean's Thirteen," Brian Koppelman, have also bid adieu to the platform.

Wrestling News reports that WWE legend Mick foley has deleted his Twitter account. Other celebrities that have threatened to leave Twitter in the past include "The Good Place" star Jameela Jamil, "The Watcher" star Mia Farrow, Black Lives Matter activist Shaun King, and author Amy Siskind. Others like "Star Trek" legend George Takei have expressed that they will hang on to the platform and will try to balance out the negativity.

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