How the recently shuttered third-party apps contributed to Twitter’s development

How the recently shuttered third-party apps contributed to Twitter’s development

a year ago
Anonymous $gM56WhLPcK

https://techcrunch.com/2023/01/24/how-the-recently-shuttered-third-party-apps-contributed-to-twitters-development/

Last week, Twitter updated its developer terms to effectively ban any alternative Twitter client application. The company’s change came after many popular apps — including Twitterrific, Tweetbot, Echofone, and Fenix — were suspended by the company’s developer platform team without any notice or explanation.

The social media company hadn’t been transparent about its decisions to shun third-party clients, only saying it was enforcing “long-standing” rules (which it then had to rush to document), making developers distrust the platform even more. While Twitter has had a rocky relationship with app developers for years, third-party clients have contributed to many critical features that are core to Twitter’s experience today.

How the recently shuttered third-party apps contributed to Twitter’s development

Jan 24, 2023, 4:42pm UTC
https://techcrunch.com/2023/01/24/how-the-recently-shuttered-third-party-apps-contributed-to-twitters-development/ > Last week, Twitter updated its developer terms to effectively ban any alternative Twitter client application. The company’s change came after many popular apps — including Twitterrific, Tweetbot, Echofone, and Fenix — were suspended by the company’s developer platform team without any notice or explanation. > The social media company hadn’t been transparent about its decisions to shun third-party clients, only saying it was enforcing “long-standing” rules (which it then had to rush to document), making developers distrust the platform even more. While Twitter has had a rocky relationship with app developers for years, third-party clients have contributed to many critical features that are core to Twitter’s experience today.