Article 75QKW X limits hot takes from freeloaders to 50 a day

X limits hot takes from freeloaders to 50 a day

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from www.theregister.com - Articles on (#75QKW)
Story ImageThe Amalgamated Union of Influencers, Trendsetters, Microbloggers, and other professional brand ambassadors is up in arms, and threatening an industry-wide strike (please note: this is not in any strict or meaningful sense true). Elon Musk is tightening the ties that bind, in bad news for enthusiastic social media personalities on X who aren't monetizing successfully enough to pay for it yet. On the site's help page, punitive restrictions on non-paid users are laid out. The current technical limits for accounts now are: Direct Messages (daily): The limit is 500 messages sent per day. Posts: 50 original posts and 200 replies per day for unverified accounts. The daily update limit is further broken down into smaller limits for semi-hourly intervals. Changes to account email: 4 per hour. Following (daily): The technical follow limit is 400 per day. Please note that this is a technical account limit only, and there are additional rules prohibiting aggressive following behavior. Following (account-based): Once an account is following 5,000 other accounts, additional follow attempts are limited by account-specific ratios. We know, and we sympathize. How could anyone cope with being limited to just 50 tweets and 200 replies a day? All the same, some of the Twitterati are not happy. If you are interested in moving up to a premium account, hilariously, at the time of writing the Premium sign-up page compares the benefits of Basic, Premium, and Premium+ accounts with this vivid and enticing description: In case of problems, the help page suggests checking the Status page, which, as the icing on the cake, currently appears to be down: And yes, we checked. Perhaps the site is simply deluged by legions of Digital Storytellers and Tastemakers who are desperately trying to pay to extend their reach. Meanwhile, other social networks remain available. Bluesky has been open to all comers for a couple of years now. Former CEO Jay Graber, who now serves as Chief Innovation Officer, has some enticing rhetoric, such as this post from October: Be warned, though, she does have a strong position against strikes: If Bluesky sounds just a tad corporate, then we suggest the Fediverse, best known through its most famous implementation and site, Mastodon. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has a guide on how to join. (R)
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