Twitter
is backtracking on a feature it made available last month that
permitted users to opt-in to receive messages from followers without the
need to follow back.
Without announcing the change, the micro-blogging platform has removed the checkbox in user settings that gave users the ability to allow direct messages from people they weren't following back. So once again if you want to send a direct message to someone you are following, he or she must be following you back. (I know; it's complicated in the world of Twitter.)
The blog post Twitter links to is about the need for the micro-blogging platform to experiment.
"Experiments are perhaps even more valuable because they help us decide what not to do –– which is important as we work to keep Twitter simple while improving the user experience," the post states. "Ultimately, our goal is to learn and keep making the product better; we aren’t necessarily looking to launch all of the experiments we roll out."
Without announcing the change, the micro-blogging platform has removed the checkbox in user settings that gave users the ability to allow direct messages from people they weren't following back. So once again if you want to send a direct message to someone you are following, he or she must be following you back. (I know; it's complicated in the world of Twitter.)
The blog post Twitter links to is about the need for the micro-blogging platform to experiment.
"Experiments are perhaps even more valuable because they help us decide what not to do –– which is important as we work to keep Twitter simple while improving the user experience," the post states. "Ultimately, our goal is to learn and keep making the product better; we aren’t necessarily looking to launch all of the experiments we roll out."
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