TechSoftwareAppsTwitter pulls the plug on the apps that made it betterThe moral of the story? Don’t put all your online eggs in someone else’s basketWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
TechSoftwareAppsTwitter pulls the plug on the apps that made it betterThe moral of the story? Don’t put all your online eggs in someone else’s basketWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
The moral of the story? Don’t put all your online eggs in someone else’s basket
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: NurPhoto / Getty Images)
(Image credit: NurPhoto / Getty Images)
At the weekend Tweetbot, the Twitter app I’ve been using for 11 years, suddenly stopped working. So did Twitterific, the app I used before I switched to Tweetbot. And it turned out it wasn’t just me. It was all the users of those apps.
Both apps have two things in common: they helped make Twitter good, and Elon Musk appears to have killed them without warning or apology to their developers, let alone their users.
I don’t mean those apps “helped make Twitter good” in terms of them just making it nicer. Third party Twitter apps shaped the birdsite, coining terms such as “tweet”, introducing the bird icon and generally showing Twitter how to do things properly. As Twitterific developer Craig Hockenberry writes in a sweary blogpost, “we literally crafted the early experience on the service. We often hear that folks joined up because of our app. Our work was definitive and groundbreaking.” And many of the apps’ users are the power users, the content creators and interesting voices that made Twitter worth spending time on. So the demise of the third party apps is a huge loss.
Go your own way
The lesson here is clear: don’t depend on anything privately owned if you aren’t the owner. As useful as social networks can be for creatives and creators, for artists and influencers, you don’t own them – and that means if they fall into the hands of somebody awful, you can lose the audiences you’ve worked so hard to build. If your only online presence is a Twitter account, an Instagram feed or a Facebook page, you’re awfully exposed.
Oasis once sang “Please don’t put your life in the hands of a rock and roll band who’ll throw it all away”; replace “rock and roll band” with “billionaire man” and it’s pretty good advice.
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