Twitter really is about to let people edit their tweets

2022 has been Twitter’s weirdest year yet, but here’s news that will make some people very happy: The company says that paying Twitter Blue customers in New Zealand will get access to an edit button later this month. A broader rollout will come thereafter, starting with Twitter Blue subscribers in Australia, Canada, and the U.S.

Back in the spring, Twitter confirmed that it was working on a feature that would let users edit tweets after they’d been published. People have been begging for that option since shortly after the service launched in 2006. But when asked about it, former CEO Jack Dorsey alternated between sounding like he was in no hurry to add it and helpfully explaining why it would be a terrible idea. Even Kim Kardashian couldn’t convince him to make it so.

[Image: Twitter]
Twitter’s hesitance on the matter has stood in contrast to Facebook, which has long had an editing option. All along, some pundits have argued that adding one would be a dangerous mistake. What if a troll tweeted something innocuous and accurate, racked up likes, retweets, and replies, and then edited the original tweet to spread misinformation or just plain confuse or embarrass people?

To help prevent such abuse, there will be a 30-minute limit for edits and a limit on how often you can re-edit a tweet. A prominent label will show that the tweet was edited; tapping it will show the edit history and prior versions. As users get access to the feature, Twitter says it will seek their feedback and refine it further. The company adds that this testing process will help it understand what would happen if it were to bring the feature to all users, not just Twitter Blue subscribers.

None of this should stand in the way of the edit button serving its most obvious, mundane purpose: allowing all of us sloppy typists to fix our typos. (I for one will be ponying up the $5/month Twitter Blue fee just as soon as it gets me editing capability.) Still, this will be the biggest change to core Twitter functionality since the service doubled its iconic 140-character limit almost five years ago. It’s tough to even visualize a Twitter that’s not only at least slightly less typo-ridden—but also devoid of people complaining that there’s no way to correct them.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90784531/twitter-edit-tweets-coming-soon?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvorené 3y | 1. 9. 2022, 13:21:20


Ak chcete pridať komentár, prihláste sa

Ostatné príspevky v tejto skupine

Casey Anthony joins TikTok and Substack to ‘advocate’ for herself

More than a decade after Casey Anthony was accused of murdering her daughter in one of the country’s most notorious murder cases, this weekend she emerged on TikTok to reintroduce herself. 

4. 3. 2025, 20:40:05 | Fast company - tech
Elon Musk’s bumbling X posts are inadvertently teaching everyone how government works

If what you don’t know can’t hurt you, Elon Musk may be in luck. With a series of candid posts on X, the White House’s resident broligarch has lately been divulging which aspects of civics and dat

4. 3. 2025, 18:30:02 | Fast company - tech
TikTok’s ‘airport theory’ dares you to arrive just 15 minutes before your flight

When it comes to airports, travelers tend to fall into two camps. There are the anxious types who show up four hours early, with plenty of time to leisurely peruse duty-free and enjoy the airport

4. 3. 2025, 16:10:09 | Fast company - tech
Uber will now pair Austin riders with Waymo self-driving cars

Starting today, if you call an Uber in Austin you can match with a self-driving Waymo vehicle. 

The launch in the Texas capital is part of an expanded partnership between the two te

4. 3. 2025, 16:10:08 | Fast company - tech
Used Tesla prices depreciated more than any other automaker in 2024

The price of used Tesla’s Model 3 and Model Y vehicles depreciated more than any other cars in 2024, according to a Fast Company analysis of CarGurus data.

The average pri

4. 3. 2025, 16:10:07 | Fast company - tech
Mozilla’s new message: We’re the only browser not backed by billionaires

As frustration with corporate power grows under the oligarch-friendly Trump administration, Mozilla Firefox

4. 3. 2025, 16:10:05 | Fast company - tech
The third coming of Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman

Microsoft employees stream down a hallway by the dozen, smartphones and paper coffee cups in hand, many clad in heavy coats on this frigid February morning. The setting is idyllic—Lake Washington

4. 3. 2025, 11:30:03 | Fast company - tech