Why did Twitter recently impose a rate limit for all users? The official reason is to combat web scrapers and bots, but others have speculated it's related t...
I also have the same problem, and then figured that hey, I’m sure there’s a startup that’s using ChatGPT to summarize videos.
Apparently there is, so here you go. Note that I didn’t watch it, and the quality seems to be pretty off :D The emojis were in the summary, I can’t really tell why - I’ve literally just taken first google result, installed an extension to throwaway browser, ran it, and will probably never use it again :D.
But, it’s kinda funny, trying to parse out what is actually true and what’s the model just being derp.
Summary
Twitter has implemented a rate limit and paywall to combat the excessive use of Bots and web scrapers, highlighting the company’s financial struggles and potential impact on advertising revenue.
💔 Twitter implemented a rate limit where non-blue check users can only view 600 tweets per day, while paying members can view up to 6,000 tweets.
00:00
💡 Twitter has implemented new features, including a rate limit and a paywall, to combat the excessive use of Bots and web scrapers.
00:18
😞 Twitter went down due to bad JavaScript code that caused a self-inflicted DDOS attack, and web scraping became a big problem after Twitter shut down access to its free API.
00:48
💔 Twitter’s rate limit changes have led to the death of third-party apps like Apollo, despite a failed protest, and it’s hard to believe that web scraping is the main reason.
01:25
💔 Twitter’s refusal to pay bills, including its Google Cloud bill, and its eviction from offices over unpaid rent, highlights the company’s financial struggles and potential impact on advertising revenue.
01:49
💰 The Google Cloud contract, worth hundreds of millions of dollars per year, expired on June 30th, and it is speculated that these new features are related to it.
02:13
💡 Twitter implemented a rate limit to manage their infrastructure migration to Raspberry Pi. [What? :D]
02:28
🤔 Elon Musk is supposedly fighting against the CIA and NSA, who are using Twitter for censorship, and there is anticipation for his upcoming battle against Mark Zuckerberg.
Key insights
🌐Being locked into a cloud platform can give the provider significant control and leverage over the user.
It’s not a hideous summary. The video is, itself, very much a blitz summary of current events.
The raspberry pi thing is a smart arse comment on twitter cheaping out on their hosting. It’s hard to find enough raspberry pis to replace the Google cloud service.
Interresting. I guess this also shows some limitations of summaries like this. It’s a shame that inevitably people will start relying on them more and more, and that’s a disaster waiting to happen. But that’s old news.
I still haven’t seen the video, because the summary is so funny that I choose to just believe that Twitter is moving from GCloud to Raspberry PIs and that CIA is censoring people through Twitter :D
I also have the same problem, and then figured that hey, I’m sure there’s a startup that’s using ChatGPT to summarize videos.
Apparently there is, so here you go. Note that I didn’t watch it, and the quality seems to be pretty off :D The emojis were in the summary, I can’t really tell why - I’ve literally just taken first google result, installed an extension to throwaway browser, ran it, and will probably never use it again :D.
But, it’s kinda funny, trying to parse out what is actually true and what’s the model just being derp.
Summary
Twitter has implemented a rate limit and paywall to combat the excessive use of Bots and web scrapers, highlighting the company’s financial struggles and potential impact on advertising revenue.
💔 Twitter implemented a rate limit where non-blue check users can only view 600 tweets per day, while paying members can view up to 6,000 tweets. 00:00
💡 Twitter has implemented new features, including a rate limit and a paywall, to combat the excessive use of Bots and web scrapers. 00:18
😞 Twitter went down due to bad JavaScript code that caused a self-inflicted DDOS attack, and web scraping became a big problem after Twitter shut down access to its free API. 00:48
💔 Twitter’s rate limit changes have led to the death of third-party apps like Apollo, despite a failed protest, and it’s hard to believe that web scraping is the main reason. 01:25
💔 Twitter’s refusal to pay bills, including its Google Cloud bill, and its eviction from offices over unpaid rent, highlights the company’s financial struggles and potential impact on advertising revenue. 01:49
💰 The Google Cloud contract, worth hundreds of millions of dollars per year, expired on June 30th, and it is speculated that these new features are related to it. 02:13
💡 Twitter implemented a rate limit to manage their infrastructure migration to Raspberry Pi. [What? :D] 02:28
🤔 Elon Musk is supposedly fighting against the CIA and NSA, who are using Twitter for censorship, and there is anticipation for his upcoming battle against Mark Zuckerberg.
Key insights
🌐Being locked into a cloud platform can give the provider significant control and leverage over the user.
It’s not a hideous summary. The video is, itself, very much a blitz summary of current events.
The raspberry pi thing is a smart arse comment on twitter cheaping out on their hosting. It’s hard to find enough raspberry pis to replace the Google cloud service.
Interresting. I guess this also shows some limitations of summaries like this. It’s a shame that inevitably people will start relying on them more and more, and that’s a disaster waiting to happen. But that’s old news.
Apollo?
Raspberry pi?
Wha…?
Having actually watched the video now i can say; Pretty much accurate.
I still haven’t seen the video, because the summary is so funny that I choose to just believe that Twitter is moving from GCloud to Raspberry PIs and that CIA is censoring people through Twitter :D
It would be great if someone could build a Lemmy bot to do this for videos.
So which of these is the “sad truth” the title seemed to allude to?
The sad truth is Twitter actually DDoSing itself.