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Twitter Communications Social Networks The Internet

Twitter Will No Longer Count Usernames Against a Tweet's 140-Character Limit (phonedog.com) 77

An anonymous reader quotes a report from PhoneDog: Last year, Twitter updated its service so that photos, videos, and other media wouldn't count against your 140-character limit. Now it's excluding another feature from that limit. Twitter is now rolling out an update that excludes usernames from your tweet's 140-character limit. This means that you can tag as many people in your tweet as you'd like, but still have 140 characters for your actual message. With this change, Twitter is also tweaking how usernames are shown when you're @ replying to people. Now you'll see "Replying to" followed by user names at the top of your tweet, rather than a long string of user names in the tweet itself. Tapping this will show you exactly who you're replying to. This update is now rolling out to Twitter.com as well as the Twitter apps for Android and iOS.
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Twitter Will No Longer Count Usernames Against a Tweet's 140-Character Limit

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  • Great... (Score:4, Funny)

    by wbr1 ( 2538558 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @04:23PM (#54146587)
    ..longer POTUS blasts. I'm thrilled.
    • Just when you thought it was safe to tweet.
      • by fyngyrz ( 762201 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @06:13PM (#54147247) Homepage Journal

        What Twitter really needs to do is change from hearts-only, to a visible thumbs-up count (same as the heart) and a visible thumbs-down count.

        Why?

        Because politicians -- pretty much all of them -- sit there with these asinine tweets that have "hearts" on them in the thousands, sometimes tens of thousands. And there is no indication whatsoever from the people who disagree on the tweet; you have to wade through unending BS to see that, and there's no telling how far you'll have to go.

        But if a politician says "X", and it's 10,000 thumbs-up / hearts, and 150,000 thumbs-down, now you know what you're looking at. And for that matter, so does the politician.

        I don't care -- at all -- about other folk. But I think Twitter is doing the nation a direct disservice by going hearts-only on politician's accounts. I don't think it would hurt anyone to see both sides of the opinions of their tweets either (goes for slashdot comments, too.) Politicians, though... that hearts thing is straight-up misleading at times.

        Anyway. I doubt they care. But I thought I'd speak up here. (Yeah, I sent them a support item on this. It disappeared into the usual darkness over there.)

        Wouldn't it be nice if some politician posts X, and you could actually show them what you thought? I think so.

        • Ohh, hearts and poo emojis...

        • But then people would have to deal with rejection when their insanity hits reality and they have to see that while some hundred like minded loonies agree, a few ten thousands of sane people consider them batshit insane.

          Can't have that in the safespace that Twitter has become!

  • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @04:25PM (#54146599)

    We should all be thankful for the phenomenal advances in computer technology that have made it possible to accommodate the extra bandwidth and storage that will be needed for this.

    • Most importantly, this will also make Twitter profitable.
    • I guess now people are free to include enormous tweets that contain every username they know.

      • Thats going to be fucking epic! I might have to create an account to test this theory. I wonder how many usernames until they will cut it off.. If social media didnt leave such a bad taste in my mouth i might actually try. But twitbook and twatface are both garbage. IRC is the original "Social Media Sites" And still alive and kicking..

      • What I'm curious about is how media channels will handle this. Currently they print out the whole tweet. Not printing out who it is addressed to is incomplete, but this can and will be easily abused.

        Not that I use or care about Twitter, but this latest move seems ill advised.

  • next... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @04:42PM (#54146673)

    "Write in textese and we'll autoexpand for you into more than 140 characters."

    "We'll only count the gzip-compressed message length against the 140 character limit, not the original message."

    "We'll only count the CMIX-compressed message length against the 140 character limit, not the original message."

    Twitter is realizing that the 140 character limit is a millstone around their neck and is too short; they'd like to go to at least a few hundred bytes, but they are afraid they're going to destroy their brand and be perceived as just another blogging platform, so they come up with all these "it's 140 characters, but..." tweaks.

  • by T.E.D. ( 34228 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @04:44PM (#54146701)

    I remember the good old days on Usenet when advertisers and trolls discovered that the posting software allowed them to crosspost their junk to every single newsgroup in existence with no limitations or drawbacks whatsoever. The term "spam" was invented during the ensuing fun.

    Now Twitter is going to unleash the same fun with tagging users for trolls and advertisers on their service. Its nice to see someone who still remembers and appreciates those good old days. You will no longer need to follow someone to get their garbage in your timeline. Ah, the memories... I can hardly wait!

  • Why can't you have tweets that are much longer - say 2000 words, or a whole magazine article? Why can't you have some layout options in your tweets? You know, like we used to with DTP (Desktop Publishing) 20+ years ago? I just don't understand Twitter's obsession with "short messages". What's so bad about longer tweets? Or are they no longer tweets then? Very confusing....
    • What's so bad about longer tweets? Or are they no longer tweets then? Very confusing....

      Do you really want me to spend 2000 characters describing my lunch or that amazing bowel movement I just had? Really? Send me your email...

      • by godrik ( 1287354 )

        Do you really want me to spend 2000 characters describing my lunch or that amazing bowel movement I just had?

        In 140 characters or 2000, I'd rather you don't describe it.

        • But 140 characters are easier to ignore than 2000.

          Just compare the average goatse-posting with the average racist rant here. Both are annoying, but the goatse one is easier to scroll by.

    • Why can't you have tweets that are much longer - say 2000 words, or a whole magazine article?

      You can. It's called posting your article on a pastebin, wiki, blog, or other site, and linking it in a Tweet. TwitLonger [twitlonger.com] is a pastebin specifically for Twitter users. Or if it's your own site, the Twitter Cards feature [twitter.com] lets you add <meta> elements to control how the link appears.

      Don't post images of text. Use TwitLonger.

    • by hackel ( 10452 )

      Because everyone posts their tweets via SMS. Didn't you know that?

      Also, Twitter users have *extremely* short attention spans. They cannot be expected to read that much.

    • > I just don't understand Twitter's obsession with "short messages".

      My pet peeve with Twitter is that replies / conversations are a second class citizen on their platform.
  • by jmccue ( 834797 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @04:50PM (#54146733) Homepage

    so I guess I can use all of "War and Peace" as my user name :)

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Just use a bot to generate usernames based on the words you want to use, and string multiple usernames together.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      I can use all of "War and Peace" as my user name

      Damn! you guessed my password.

  • by billrp ( 1530055 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @05:01PM (#54146851)
    are in Twitter's near future
  • I'm still using Pascal.

  • by c ( 8461 ) <beauregardcp@gmail.com> on Thursday March 30, 2017 @05:14PM (#54146943)

    ... these changes aren't expected to have any impact on Twitter's overall signal-to-noise ratio.

  • I have two twitter accounts. Actually, I have one and my cat has one too. One of the true arts of twitter is keeping your post down to 140 characters. It's difficult sometimes.

    I've also found that using fewer words on slashdot usually gets me modded up more than when I drone on and on endlessly.

    I assume people get bored at some point.

    And sending a message to too many people at once can get you in trouble. I once sent an e-mail to about 30 different people right after I left one job and then I went on a

    • Yeah, keeping it short can be pretty difficult sometimes. It's a useful skill to have. For example when you need to tell someone something without wasting much time, like when you are in a hurry.

      One time I wrote a long email to someone. And they only skimmed it and then asked questions that were directly answered in the email.

      Ever since, I've been keeping my messages short so no one can claim that their pet piece of information was not included in my email. For example, that one time someone asked a really

  • Does this mean my username can be Hyades1 thegodamnedestsmartguy everandunquestionablythebestabuserofcharacterlimits imposedbyplacesliketwitterwhereideasgotodie isgoingtohavethebestesthandle everinthehistoryof tweetstorming sothere?

    It would have looked better, but Slashdot apparently needs spaces between at least some words or it won't allow the post.

    Anyway...this should be fun.

  • by PPH ( 736903 )

    ... the nine billion user names of God and then watch the lights go out.

  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Thursday March 30, 2017 @07:32PM (#54147599) Journal

    "Twitter Will No Longer Count Usernames Against a Tweet's 140-Character Limit"

    All this innovation is killing me! What's next, uppercase letters?

  • I don't know why this is news, but ok. I'm still not going to log in to Twitter except to get up to date news on how late my train is going to be from the local train group. Honestly I'd rather we just went back to RSS or Atom feeds

  • @this @allows @very @long @tweets, @but @certain @users @with @very @common @names @are @going @to @get @annoyed @at @all @the @notifications @they @get @if @people @use @this @hack.

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