Individual Twitter posts became accessible in the past few hours.<p>Replies aren’t visible, and you can’t access profiles or search without logging in.<p>I’m honestly quite surprised, but maybe their traffic plummeted by a huge amount and affected ad revenues.
I don't really understand why social sites don't support a decent "read-only" mode.<p>I get that someone having an account probably makes them slightly more likely to engage and perhaps a little easier to target with ads, but it's not like read-only sites and services can't make decent ad money. And isn't it true that only a tiny percentage of social media users contribute?<p>Adding needless restrictions to users who just want to consume content on your service seems like a really stupid idea when those users are probably the bulk of the user base and will bring in the bulk of ad dollars.<p>Personally I won't use services that require me to sign up. I used to use Twitter quite a bit without an account to search for conversations about current topics or just look at the tweets of someone I'm interested in. Recently I've been forced to sign in to use search so I've just stopped using it. Maybe some people would sign up, but I'm guessing a very significant percentage people won't bother creating an account just to search for something on Twitter.
Twitter posted a corporate-speak update on the limits yesterday <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36596145">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36596145</a><p>Some damage is done. Even my local print newspaper reported about Twitter restricting views massively and I doubt they'll report about lifting of limits.
I didn't sign up for a twitter acct until October 2021, when it became required to view content.<p>I do not recall the same fuss happening then. They backed off that policy then after a month or less? and it was policy, right?