Twitter’s contemplating a feature to let users tip for good tweets
Twitter wants to make their platform not just a place to promote your services, but perhaps get payment for them too.
Twitter wants to make their platform not just a place to promote your services, but perhaps get payment for them too.
Twitter’s a weird a platform. It’s a bit like going into a public place, shouting your thoughts out and hoping that people like them enough to run about repeating those thoughts. If you’re unlucky, the stuff you say might be stupid or controversial enough to have everybody shouting about how wrong you are right to your face.
Twitter's CEO Jack Dorsey has announced an initiative to see social media decentralized.
With new technology comes new ways to steal, and Twitter happens to be crawling with bots programmed to pick up on complimentary tweets and grab the material that has earned such praise like a maggot on rotting meat. It’ll be mere minutes before the algorithms find the art, convert it into a file and plaster all over actual T-shirts which you can buy, albeit at the expense of the artist whose livelihood depends on them not being taken advantage of like this by unscrupulous vendors.
If you always dreamed of a particular Twitter username that no one ever seemed to be using, but was taken anyway. You may get a chance in the near future.
One of Tweetdeck's most popular features seems to be finally coming to Twitter's Web app.
Yesterday, Twitter boss Jack Dorsey announced that the platform would be banning all political advertising on Twitter from November. It’s an interesting, curious but mostly welcome move in age where misinformation on social media is used to sway voters.
Twitter is making big gains in stamping out abusive content on its platform while also admitting that it gives ads to the more unpopular users to maintain a premium experience for its top users.
In the digital age where online shopping prevails, eCommerce security has become paramount for …
A spooky European village. Properly scary castle mania. Vampires. Werewolves! The only thing more frightening, is a glimpse at your empty bank account when it comes to deciding whether or not you can grab Resident Evil Village this month. Capcom's successor to its long-running survival-horror franchise is finally out, and if you've read our review then you know the game is a winner on multiple levels.
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