Your Web News in One Place

Help Webnuz

Referal links:

Sign up for GreenGeeks web hosting
April 19, 2022 01:15 pm GMT

Why You Should Care About Sneaky Elon Buying Twitter Out

Its 19 April, 2022. The Web3 cults are growing, NFT enthusiasts are fighting intense bidding wars to see who goes broke the fastest, a sovereign country is being invaded, Trump still hasnt lost the election, and a sneaky billionaire has pulled the Twitter rug out from under the publics bottom. Being swept up in the times yourself, it might be difficult to detach yourself from your everyday grind to see what events deserve your attention and why. Good thing you dont have to, because Ive done that for you. I took a closer look at whats currently happening with the social media giant, Twitter. I wanted to find out if the events surrounding Twitter could impact regular developers, tech companies that rely on it, or content creators that are within the tech space, and these are my conclusions so far.

What Happened?

Since the 31st of January, sneaky Elon Musk has been chipping off and stashing twitter stocks in little batches almost every single day. Regardless of why he did so in such a shady manner, as of 4th April, he became the largest shareholder of Twitter with a 9% stake. That automatically granted him a seat on the board. One of his first moves in his newfound role was to initiate a massive hostile take-over thatll make him 100% owner of Twitter. Classic Elon Musk.

His motivations seem to be purely political and ethical in nature, citing that Twitters moderation of hate-speech is somehow a war on free-speech. Im not inclined to comment on that. The key takeaway is that Musk wants to revise Twitter as a platform to make it more conformed to his definition of free-speech, and that is the driving factor behind his policy changes, which were about to get into.

Ive combed through the tweets and various news outlets to find if theres anything remotely relevant to developers that make use of Twitters APIs, content creators that use it to promote their brands, or business models that rely on it, and Ive only really found 3 potential policy changes that matter

Why Should It Matter to You?

1.Making Twitters Algorithm Public

In a poll that sneaky Elon conducted on his Twitter account, he asked his followers if Twitters algorithm should be made public and open source. 82.7% of his followers who voted on the pole said yes, which should fairly express the will of Twitter users in general seeing as how Elon Muskss account is the 8th most popular account on Twitter coming out at around 81M followers.

Whether making Twitters algorithm open source would affect the tech world as much as similar moves done by NaN with the 3D editing software Blender, Twitter with Bootstrap, or Meta (Facebook) with React, is actually very questionable though. First of all, most of the people who agreed to make the algorithm open source wouldnt be able to understand it in the first place. And second of all, Twitter doesnt really have a single algorithm.

Anyone with programming knowledge would know that an algorithm is really just a computational and/or mathematical approach taken to solve a very specific computing problem. They usually deal with the methodology to handle, recognize, classify, and optimize data, not business goals.

The algorithm that people want made public is the one that Twitter uses to show content to its users. The only issue is, Twitter does not use a single algorithm to make sure content gets to its users. It employs a multitude of various heuristics, algorithms, and artificial intelligence to make sure content gets to particular users based on their locations, friends, search history, tags explored, interests, likes, retweets, etc. It would be a herculean read for any single developer, and it wouldnt really serve a clear purpose that isnt academic or corporate. If you add to that, the fact that those algorithms are really only functional within Twitters ecosystem, Twitter would have to expose some implementation details about their platform to make sure readers get the right context.

In my opinion, I would say not a lot of developers would be interested in this reveal at all, but Twitters competitors, other tech giants, and venture capitalists would certainly dig out a business model from it. However, if youre that type of developer, maybe itll be like reading a good book.

2. Reducing the number of bots

This one deserves much more concern from the broad spectrum of developers directly. Elon Musk has suggested intensifying procedures that Twitter uses to detect and remove bots. He cited that bots are the biggest problem with Twitter, and that he would employ stricter authentication, verification, and screening of Twitter accounts to determine which ones should be removed.

If youre a developer that has or relies on Twitter bots to offer some sort of service, this could impact the way you have to write your code. You could also have to modify the way your bot makes use of Twitter to make sure it isnt flagged.

Potentially this might lead to some code-base rewrites for companies whose businesses are centered around twitter content generation and engagement or for developers who just like making bots in general. You might have to re-factor in a few months, so keep a heads up.

3. Removing ad-based revenue

This one doesnt affect developers directly, but it does change the ecosystem of twitter as a whole for entrepreneurs and content creators in any industry. That of course includes software and tech. For Twitter to remove ad-based revenue would probably mean the end of sponsored tweets, and that could significantly impact some businesses.

This is a major flag that entrepreneurs and content creators have to address.

Finishing Thoughts?

All in all, this is just my assessment of the situation given what I can see. On top of influencing Twitter developers, content creators, and business owners, I feel like this purchase could prove to be politically shaking as well. What are your thoughts about what might happen if Elon Musk successfully buys Twitter out?

P.S: I'm new at content creation, so criticism is welcome. If you're interested in my coverage, more content on my new blog: https://cassaden.com/blogs/curated.


Original Link: https://dev.to/cassaden/why-you-should-care-about-sneaky-elon-buying-twitter-out-d27

Share this article:    Share on Facebook
View Full Article

Dev To

An online community for sharing and discovering great ideas, having debates, and making friends

More About this Source Visit Dev To