Mark Zuckerberg has always been an unfit CEO. https://t.co/BSVmKhjMxG
— drew olanoff (@yoda) November 8, 2019
Internal emails from 2012 to 2015 show how online dating apps, particularly Tinder, went from being a nuisance to an important strategic partner to Facebook https://t.co/3SsncJQBqK by @AngelAuYeung pic.twitter.com/QROcpE3JVr
— Forbes (@Forbes) November 7, 2019
“Zuckerberg's strategy to exert control over the app market during the time period covered by the documents triggered one ... employee to compare the company to villains from "Game of Thrones"
— Sonia Livingstone (@Livingstone_S) November 7, 2019
Facebook leveraged user data to fight rivals and help friends https://t.co/br4Cnf9go6
I’m pretty sure that we have enough context for this email from Zuck. Facebook is gonna make Microsoft’s anti-competitive case look like Barney and Friends. https://t.co/BSVmKhjMxG pic.twitter.com/v3adIbalIe
— drew olanoff (@yoda) November 8, 2019
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg dismissed Tinder co-founder, Sean Rad, as irrelevant but he still let the dating app get special access to users’ data https://t.co/bSDBKua1pX by @AngelAuYeung pic.twitter.com/H6bjfD2YXE
— Forbes (@Forbes) November 7, 2019
Facebook execs: Why does the media always assume the worst of us and refuse to take our privacy claims at face value? It must be because they're elite gatekeepers who are bitter about losing their power to a democratized platform.
— Will Oremus (@WillOremus) November 7, 2019
Also Facebook execs: https://t.co/FJBGsOkjBS pic.twitter.com/6FjU0WUVHt
Better to get ahead of the EU banning political ad microtargeting anyway. #TheGreatHack https://t.co/gPNxF5ytcH https://t.co/oLe6tjG5NZ
— David Carroll ? (@profcarroll) November 8, 2019
EU could introduce political ad rules for Facebook and Twitter https://t.co/YD5AD56DtY
— Paul Nemitz (@PaulNemitz) November 8, 2019
A company that doesn't seem to communicate well with its users wants us to communicate better with each other. https://t.co/yAOlHd4qGW
— The Chosen Patronus ?? (@ExpectoResister) November 9, 2019
News: Twitter knows ratio, dunking, and retweeting mindlessly are a problem. Within two weeks, it will begin a series of experiments that tweak core functionality like the retweet and reply in order to motivate people to use the service differently. https://t.co/eFIlPwwNwO
— Alex Kantrowitz (@Kantrowitz) November 7, 2019
"please provide your answer in a five paragraph essay" https://t.co/00wGSTUupb pic.twitter.com/s4mRcp87vj
— BDM (@bdmcclay) November 9, 2019
Honestly, some of y'all deserve to be dunked on and ratio'd, and Twitter shouldn't change that https://t.co/FvqPXE5w4w
— LaVendrick Smith (@LaVendrickS) November 9, 2019
Twitter wants to make Twitter a less terrible place. Like. https://t.co/nyPNXNTSAT
— Sarah Blaskovich (@sblaskovich) November 9, 2019
No one:
— Sleepy Rebs (Ezra) (@EzraCeleste) November 8, 2019
Not a single soul:
Twitter: hmmm, if I pull this trigger while aiming it at my head I wonder what will happen...https://t.co/RNJitivuz2
Twitter should also add this notice on clicking reply
— Dare Obasanjo (@Carnage4Life) November 9, 2019
"Before responding to this tweet, remember that just because you haven't had the same experience as the author doesn't mean they're lying or overreacting. It just means you haven't had that experience"https://t.co/vvT3GLnrcz
Twitter Is Trying To Fix The Dunk And Ratio With New Product Tweaks - get ready for emojis aimed at “nuance.” ?https://t.co/qHHrmzbdKh
— Barbara Malmet (@B52Malmet) November 9, 2019
Twitter Is Trying To Fix The Dunk And Ratio https://t.co/MuhRSZFZGg via @kantrowitz
— Dr. Jennifer Mercieca (@jenmercieca) November 9, 2019
Twitter Is Trying To Fix The Dunk And Ratio https://t.co/RgexWnIEFe pic.twitter.com/jk5gIgh372
— Rich Tehrani (@rtehrani) November 9, 2019
using the deep nuance of the cable car emoji to bring harmony to my Web site https://t.co/TfEOqjjeY0 pic.twitter.com/AdPDjtSmrY
— thomas violence (@thomas_violence) November 9, 2019
I know this reaction is because I am an old, but the very concept that this might work is so bizarre I am going to out myself anyway. WTF. https://t.co/YpDYysLwn7 pic.twitter.com/08f3nGvEzr
— Sean Barrett (@nothings) November 8, 2019
Twitter’s trying to stop everyone quote tweeting stuff with anger, asking them to instead use emojis and prompting them to explain why they’re angry. All in an attempt to please please stop everyone being a prick to each other. https://t.co/KC431cYxvw
— Jim Waterson (@jimwaterson) November 8, 2019
The problems with Twitter IMO aren't the dunk/ratio (those things are typically warranted & organic actions by the community). The problems are spammers, fake accounts and those threatening violence/harm. Product itself is great/why we're all still here. https://t.co/d1su8BEQWa
— Adam Singer (@AdamSinger) November 8, 2019
The EU is coming after big tech again — this time for political ads https://t.co/J3gjBEGdjA
— TNW (@thenextweb) November 8, 2019
The EU is coming after big tech again — this time for political ads https://t.co/II7rIxsPSC
— TNW (@thenextweb) November 8, 2019
The EU is coming after big tech again — this time for political ads https://t.co/keR4O8V6Qy
— TNW (@thenextweb) November 8, 2019
Leak of 4,000 Facebook documents heaps more trouble on internet giant https://t.co/1qkF0LX9tM #infosec pic.twitter.com/SrjTr5bOUw
— #AI (@AI__TECH) November 9, 2019
How leaked court documents reveal Facebook’s fundamental paranoia https://t.co/59CGbPp0a3 pic.twitter.com/woRx3G0Wtz
— Reg Saddler (@zaibatsu) November 8, 2019
How leaked court documents reveal Facebook’s fundamental paranoia https://t.co/aC7Zibo1kC pic.twitter.com/Gm6M82UPBc
— The Verge (@verge) November 8, 2019
How leaked court documents reveal Facebook’s fundamental paranoia https://t.co/nRUQdOh0vv > The company’s anticompetitive behavior is rooted in a deep sense of fear that it’s vulnerable to rivals
— PrivacyDigest (@PrivacyDigest) November 8, 2019