Twitter already hides superfluous replies to your tweets, now it's toying with handing that power to the masses. Software engineer Jane Manchun Wong, who has a knack for discovering what social media apps are building, outed the user moderation has since confirmed the funtion is in development.
Twitter already hides superfluous replies to your tweets, now it's toying with handing that power to the masses. Software engineer Jane Manchun Wong, who has a knack for discovering what social media apps are building, outed the user moderation has since confirmed the funtion is in development. As shown in screenshots, the update effectively allows users to hide individual responses to their tweets via the menu icon at the toop right of a reply. Meanwhile, those reading along can unlock the hidden posts by following the same steps.
Twitter's Michelle yasmeen Haq explained the platform's approach in a thread : " We think the transparency of the hidden replies would allow the community to notice and call out situations where people use the feature to hide content they disagree with. We think this can balance the product experience between the original Tweeter and the audience."
Had said Twitter will start testing the feature publicity " in the coming months." It probably helps that it how a dedicated app to do just that. The fact is not everyone agrees with Twitter's claims that the health of conversations on its site are improving. And while it's proactively cracking down on its most barefaced abusers, this upcoming test shows that it's also relying on users to police their own discussions.
Twitter's Michelle yasmeen Haq explained the platform's approach in a thread : " We think the transparency of the hidden replies would allow the community to notice and call out situations where people use the feature to hide content they disagree with. We think this can balance the product experience between the original Tweeter and the audience."
Had said Twitter will start testing the feature publicity " in the coming months." It probably helps that it how a dedicated app to do just that. The fact is not everyone agrees with Twitter's claims that the health of conversations on its site are improving. And while it's proactively cracking down on its most barefaced abusers, this upcoming test shows that it's also relying on users to police their own discussions.