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Twitter Prepares For Huge Cull of Inactive Users (bbc.com) 47

Twitter will begin deleting accounts that have been inactive for more than six months, unless they log in before an 11 December deadline. From a report: The cull will include users who stopped posting to the site because they died -- unless someone with that person's account details is able to log-in. It is the first time Twitter has removed inactive accounts on such a large scale. The site said it was because users who do not log-in were unable to agree to its updated privacy policies. A spokeswoman also said it would improve credibility by removing dormant accounts from people's follower counts, something which may give a user an undue sense of importance. The first batch of deleted accounts will involve those registered outside of the US. The firm bases inactivity on whether or not a person has logged in at least once in the past six months. Twitter said the effort is not, as had been suggested by some users on the network, an attempt to free up usernames.

That said, previously unavailable usernames will start coming up for grabs after the 11 December cut-off -- though Twitter said it would be a gradual process, beginning with users outside of the US. In future, the firm said it would also look at accounts where people have logged in but don't "do anything" on the platform. A spokeswoman would not elaborate, other to say that the firm uses many signals to determine genuine human users -- not just whether they interact with, or post, tweets.
Further reading: You can take my Dad's tweets over my dead body.

UPDATE (11/29/2019): "Twitter said Wednesday it is putting the brakes, for now, on a plan to start deleting inactive accounts that was set to begin next month," reports SiliconValley.com.

"Twitter said it would hold back on the plan to clear out accounts that had been inactive for at least six months after hearing from multiple users about whether or not they would be able to access the accounts of deceased family members after the Dec. 11 deadline Twitter had established...."
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Twitter Prepares For Huge Cull of Inactive Users

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  • My old account, you will be missed even if all you did was relay road warnings.
  • by davidwr ( 791652 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2019 @11:38AM (#59462286) Homepage Journal

    1) Mark the account as dormant and mark its activity as by an inactive user. This includes making it unable to receive communication from normal users.
    2) Mark all activity by the account as private, removing it from public view. For all intents and purposes, nobody will be able to tell the account ever existed if they only search the site in question.
    3) Optionally back up the user data and delete it from online servers.
    4) Delete all account data except perhaps some meta-data visible to site administrators that show that the account once existed and when it was deleted.
    5) Optionally, make account name available again.

    Put suitable gaps between each step. The gap between step 2 and 5 should be at least a year.

    If "name-recycling" is the only goal, take the Wikipedia approach and make some inactive accounts eligible for "involuntary renaming" to make the original name available again.

    • 1) Don't announce that you are going to delete inactive accounts (it isn't fair to troll farm employees who will now need to put in 80 hour weeks for the same pay)
      2) Hit the fucking delete button.
      3) Realize the Earth is still spinning.

  • by LatencyKills ( 1213908 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2019 @11:41AM (#59462296)
    When the smoke clears, Twitter realizes it has only 14 active accounts.
    • Only a few lonely souls that also do nothing more than retweet, and technically, can be considered bots too.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      There are way more than 14 bots. I know, I run one.

      I have a home-made IoT device that periodically posts some climate information to Twitter. It was a fun little project back in the day, and it also sends data to Weather Underground.

      I guess it's going to stop working unless I remember to log in every 6 months. Oh well.

      • Wouldn't the device posting remove the inactive flag? Making it report the weather at least once every 5 months (to be safe) should be enough to keep the account alive.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Maybe... They have an API for this which lets apps post, but of course the app doesn't accept the new T&Cs on the user's behalf.

      • I meant my comment as a joke, but I'm not sure "There are way more than 14 bots" follows logically from "I run one" In fact, as I try and count them up, I come up with: three Kardashians, Donald Trump (the guy who keeps the President posting under 'therealdonaldtrump", 'therealdonaldtrump", "therealrealdonaldtrump" (A Donald Trump parody poster), and apparently AmiMoJo's weather bot. For a total of 7. I was thinking of adding Bill Clinton's for eight total, but then recall reading somewhere that he hasn
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I was joking too.

          But there are definitely more than 14 people on Twitter, I mean the Internet Research Agency employs over 1000 people.

          • But does anyone really know how many? I recall reading a statistic somewhere that said that 98% of all tweets are never read by anyone. I can't seem to find that statistic, but there is an interesting trove of Twitter data here: https://expandedramblings.com/... [expandedramblings.com] which states among other things that 10% of Twitter users account for 80% of tweets.
    • Ninety million active accounts, all connecting from the same 14 IP addresses.
    • by higuita ( 129722 )

      and 5 of then are from trump for him to agree with himself !! :D

    • Twitter realizes it has only 14 active accounts.

      Are any of these Twitter accounts [slashdot.org] active? It was over a decade ago, but I remember when they were promoting GNU/Linux and bashing "M$".

    • by rastos1 ( 601318 )
      And one of them is Trump.
    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      Both true and not true.

      I mean.. I feel like I almost have 14 accounts myself alone .. Then again are they active? No. I don't even know which ones I have! .. But on the other hand I guess now I have to find out.

  • I have not been on or posted to Twitter in years. Can't even remember when. Shoot, I don't even know what the app is like anymore. Actually, I never tweated. But I use to follow news sites on Twitter. LA Times, CBS News, Washington Post, .... This let me see in one place the most recent headlines.
  • What will historians do, when all the literature from an era is "deleted" to make space.

    Oh, wait!

  • What will the account resellers do now? https://buyaccs.com/en/buy-bul... [buyaccs.com]

  • by mwfischer ( 1919758 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2019 @12:11PM (#59462430) Journal

    Imagine all the disappointed data archaeologists in the future studying what is obviously going to be called "The Dawn of the Stupid Age" having all this raw information purged.

  • Would " -- unless someone with that person's account details is able to log-in." not violate their TOS?

    Can a third party agree to new privacy policies on the behalf of the deceased?

  • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2019 @12:32PM (#59462536)
    I have a lot of misgivings about social media, but regardless of whether I think it's a good idea, lots of people put a lot of their heart and soul into these sites. I think Twitter the organization should maybe have a bit more empathy for how people interact with their service. Would it really be so great of a loss to them to just like hide these things and make the usernames available to start with and only full delete if nobody complains within X years?
    • Twitter is in reality a company, and this is what companies consider "trimming the fat" so to speak. They're making a logic move to clean up accounts verified as dormant/dead to de-clutter the platform. Unfortunately empathy doesn't play a part in these decisions.

      • by g01d4 ( 888748 )

        de-clutter the platform

        From this site [feedough.com]

        [Their] valuation is dependent on the number of users and the engagement of users.

        So there's a trade-off to "de-clutter[ing]". I suppose they decided they could no longer hide declining engagement (same link) and decided to be up front about it.

    • twitter is a cancer and causing nothing but social unrest. The sooner it goes offline the better.

  • Delete the whole of Twitter. Nothing of importance will be lost.

  • The Wraiths of Twitter will be satisfied with this year's culling.
  • Good start (Score:4, Insightful)

    by JeffOwl ( 2858633 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2019 @02:32PM (#59463152)
    But if they really want to improve things it would have a more positive impact if they culled a bunch of their active users.

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