

Musk has fired thousands of Twitter developers in recent months to cut costs at his expensively acquired social network. “This likely created some hellish conditions that the engineers never envisioned and so we get this comedy of errors resulting in the most epic of self-owns, the self-DDOS. “Twitter is firing off about 10 requests a second to itself to try and fetch content that never arrives because Elon's latest genius innovation is to block people from being able to read Twitter without logging in,” Chang adds. “It appears that Twitter is DDOSing itself.” A DDOS is a distributed denial of service attack, where bad actors try to bring websites down by flooding them with millions of junk requests.Ĭhang posted videos showing Twitter sending repeated requests for content that never loads.
#Tweetdeck teams not working code
Writing on alternative social network Mastodon, developer Sheldon Chang claims Twitter’s own code is hammering the site with requests for content. While Elon Musk continues to point the finger at aggressive web scrapers for Twitter’s problems, others are suggesting that the site’s troubles may be self-inflicted. Hover your mouse above or below an existing web part or under the title region, click, and then select the Twitter web part. If you're not in edit mode already, click Edit at the top right of the page. We’re also introducing Decks-a new way to group columns into clean workspaces.” Twitter’s Rate Limit Problem Go to the page where you want to add the Twitter web part.


#Tweetdeck teams not working full
People participating in the TweetDeck Preview can expect to see features like a full Tweet Composer, Advanced search features, and new column types. “This preview of an improved version of TweetDeck offers enhanced functionality and incorporates more of what you see on. The TweetDeck website confirms that “we’re currently testing a new version of TweetDeck with a limited number of people globally. By removing some of the original features and working more on the main version of the tool, the TweetDeck team can focus on making TweetDeck the best possible tool to facilitate Twitter management. However, TweetDeck is supposed to be receiving a long overdue update, with own Twitter status saying: “a new & improved ing soon.” Even though it could seem like Twitter might slowly be killing off the app, that is not the case. Indeed, last year it was withdrawn as a standalone app and only made available as a web app. TweetDeck is owned and maintained by Twitter itself, although the app has seen very little development over the past few years. TweetDeck’s ability to show dozens of tweets simultaneously, with multiple timelines updating in real time, means it likely places higher demand on Twitter’s servers than the regular Twitter apps and may be one reason why Twitter has decided to disable parts of the app.
