Elon Musk’s Warnings About Twitter Rivals Threads and Bluesky Issues Come True

Elon Musk’s Warnings About Twitter Rivals Threads and Bluesky Issues Come True

AFP

KEY ⁤POINTS

Threads ⁤announced‍ strengthening rate limits to counter spam attacks on the ⁣platform

Bluesky​ users complained about​ some accounts ‍that used ‍racial slurs in their usernames

Twitter was heavily criticized⁣ after implementing‍ “extreme measures” aimed at bots‌ and “bad ‌actors”

Bluesky and⁣ Threads, two of‌ the​ most ‌promising ⁢Twitter ​competitors, are ‍experiencing‍ spam and content moderation​ issues that Elon​ Musk’s‍ social ⁢media platform ​previously suffered.

On⁤ Monday, Adam Mosseri,⁣ the head of‌ Instagram who also runs its​ new⁢ microblogging app Threads, revealed that⁢ the⁤ new ⁣social media ‍platform will​ employ ⁣restrictions to combat “spam attacks.”

“We’re going to have⁤ to get tighter ‍on things like rate limits,⁣ which is going to mean more⁣ unintentionally limiting active ⁤people (false positives). If you get caught up [in] those protections let us know,” Mosseri​ wrote⁢ on his Threads post.

Meanwhile, Bluesky, ⁢the ​decentralized social media website launched by former Twitter​ CEO Jack ‍Dorsey, faced a community backlash ⁤last week after it was revealed⁤ that some accounts used​ racial ‌slurs in‌ their usernames.

In‌ response, Bluesky ‍said it removed the ⁤suspicious accounts within ⁤40 minutes ‍after some​ users ​alerted them.

“Our community​ guidelines reflect our values:⁢ that racism and harassment‍ have no place⁣ on Bluesky, and we ⁤will ​continue ⁤to take ‍action to⁣ uphold these policies,” ⁢the ‌platform said on its official account, according to Mashable.

Bryan Newbold, a⁣ protocol⁣ engineer‌ and a Bluesky team member, also‌ apologized for the incident, saying it ⁣”caused harm to ⁣real people, ⁣including Black folks…​ who‌ supported Bluesky.”

Earlier this⁣ month, Musk’s Twitter carried ‌out⁣ “extreme ​measures” to address⁣ spam and​ bots on the platform.

In a blog post, Twitter ‍said it “temporarily​ limited usage” in order⁢ to ‍detect automated ⁢accounts and‌ “other⁣ bad actors” ‍harming the ‌app.

The app also⁣ moved ‌to prevent​ bots from scraping the data of public Twitter users​ and ​manipulating conversations ‌on the platform.

However,​ the move was heavily ​criticized⁤ by the Twitter community after ‌many received‌ an⁣ error message that they​ had exceeded the “rate limit” and were blocked⁢ from‍ seeing other tweets.

Esther Crawford, ‍Twitter’s‌ former director of⁤ product⁤ management who was fired by Musk ‌in February, hit out ‌at his decision.

“Hubris‌ +⁤ no pushback – customer ⁢empathy⁣ – data ⁣= a⁤ great way‍ to light billions on fire,” Crawford wrote.

In addition, Twitter’s ​recent meltdown ⁣had been exploited by Meta, ‍the company owned⁤ by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, to launch‍ the⁢ Threads app on ⁣July 6.

On⁢ his ‌official Threads account, ‌Zuckerberg touted ⁤the platform as an “open⁤ and friendly​ public‍ space for conversation.”

In a⁢ span of⁣ five days, Meta’s new social app garnered more than ‌100 million signups, breaking the record of OpenAI’s⁢ ChatGPT, ‍which amassed the same number of registrations in⁢ two ‌months.

AFP

2023-07-19 05:00:03
Article from www.ibtimes.com

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