One of the most important tools for trust and safety efforts is the “block” feature, allowing a user to entirely block someone else from following them. Yes, on Twitter you can get around this by g…
3rd-party Twitter clients are going to have quite a spike in popularity then, just need to implement clientside blocking.
It won’t prevent the person blocked from seeing your posts, but that’s kind of impossible to enforce on a public platform, anyway.
3rd-party Twitter clients are going to have quite a spike in popularity then, just need to implement clientside blocking. It won’t prevent the person blocked from seeing your posts, but that’s kind of impossible to enforce on a public platform, anyway.
Twitter is killing those, too: https://www.theverge.com/2023/1/22/23564460/twitter-third-party-apps-history-contributions
Reddit probably got that idea from Twitter. Kinda like how Instagram (Facebook) got the “pay for verification idea” from Twitter