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Twitter limits number of posts users can read a day

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Twitter limits number of posts users can read a day

Elon Musk has announced a temporary cap on the number of tweets users can read each day, with verified subscribers getting to see a lot more than those without a blue tick.

Thousands reported problems with the site as the changes came in, leading to RIP Twitter trending.

Musk said Twitter applied the temporary daily reading limits to address “extreme levels” of data scraping and system manipulation.

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In a tweet, Musk said verified accounts have been temporarily limited to reading 6,000 posts a day.

Unverified Twitter accounts have been limited to reading 600 posts a day, while new unverified accounts can only view 300 posts a day.

Depending on how many tweets you’ve viewed today – and whether or not you’re verified – you might be able to read his message here.

However, if you’re one of the Twitter users seeing a message stating “rate limit exceeded”, you can see his post here.

Elon Musk has announced “temporary limits” to the amount of posts people can read a day on Twitter.

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The announcement soon led to RIP Twitter and #Twitterdown trending on the social media site.

Musk, who is also the chief executive of Tesla and SpaceX, has not said how long the temporary limits will last for.

People started reporting problems shortly after midday UK time, according to problem and outage monitoring site Downdetector. By 6pm, the website had received thousands of reports.

It comes after people trying to access Twitter on Friday were told they would have to be logged in to an account to view tweets, in what Musk called a “temporary emergency measure”.

And in February, an outage meant many users were not able to tweet, follow accounts or access their direct messages as the platform was plagued by widespread technical problems.

The billionaire completed a $44bn (£35bn) takeover of the social media site in October 2022, and in April introduced a payment system for “blue ticks”, or verified accounts. Subscribers are able to post longer tweets and are also able to make changes to published tweets, see about half as many adverts, and use non-fungible token (NFT) profile pictures.

High-profile figures and celebrities said the move leaves the platform open to imposters and disinformation, while Twitter has said the service “elevates quality conversations”.

Since the entrepreneur’s acquisition, Twitter has cut costs dramatically and laid off thousands of employees, including many who had worked on efforts to prevent harmful and illegal content, protect election integrity, and surface accurate information on the site.

In December, just weeks after the takeover, he tweeted: “I will resign as CEO as soon as I find someone foolish enough to take the job.”

In May, then NBC Universal executive Linda Yaccarino was announced as Twitter’s new chief executive, with Musk, 52, saying he would take up the role of executive chairman.

The pledge came after millions of Twitter users asked him to step down in a poll Musk created and promised to abide by.

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