• Re: Twitter pilots new 'Circle Jerk' feature that lets users tweet to s

    From The Biden Train Wreck@21:1/5 to democratic faggots on Tue Jun 14 06:15:13 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.abortion, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: alt.politics.libertarian

    In article <XnsACC29287FEBFBjrytsre@95.216.243.224>
    democratic faggots <demfaggots@msnbc.com> wrote:

    Republicans are great.

    Yahoo Finance’s Dan Howley joins the Live show to discuss
    Twitter’s new ‘Circle’ feature.

    Video Transcript
    [MUSIC PLAYING]

    AKIKA FUJITA: Twitter is testing the waters with a new feature
    that gives users the option to share their tweets amongst a
    select group of people. For a deeper dive on this, let's bring
    in Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley. Twitter Circle is what we're
    talking about.

    DAN HOWLEY: Twitter Circle. You need more confusion on Twitter
    because it's not confusing enough. And that might be why there's
    not a lot of people on there. But to give you an idea of what
    Twitter Circle is, think of it as a smaller version of Twitter,
    right?

    It's basically meant-- it's in testing right now. It's for iOS,
    Android, web. They'll give you an invite if you manage to sneak
    in. Or you can tell if you're on when you go to draft a tweet
    and it asks you if you want to send it to a smaller group of
    folks. Basically, what it is, is you can invite up to 150
    people, or just sign them up to your circle. You can then send
    tweets directly to that circle so that if you just want--

    AKIKA FUJITA: It kind of feels like WhatsApp.

    DAN HOWLEY: Kind of, yeah, right? Exact--

    - Or GroupMe?

    DAN HOWLEY: Yeah.

    - It could be like GroupMe.

    DAN HOWLEY: Or any, like, other social networks.

    [LAUGHING]

    And so you'll be able to send out tweets. You can discuss
    whatever you want. It will not show up on your main feed. It
    will not show up on any of your followers main feeds. They can
    retweet you, but only those tweets-- or those tweets will only
    show up in the circle.

    - Right.

    DAN HOWLEY: So it'll never leave that area unless someone
    screenshots it or copy and pastes it or whatever. So it's meant
    to be a place where you can feel more comfortable talking, I
    guess. But, you know, I mean, I don't know what I would say on
    Twitter that I wouldn't really say outside of it.

    - So I guess the use case for this is if it's large enough of a
    community that you couldn't have just an iMessage group or a
    text message thread. But it also has to be small enough that you
    wouldn't just rely on Reddit or any other type of board to do
    this. So do you think this is going to catch on? Because look,
    we all remember Fleets, which I-- which, for the record, I was a
    huge fan of. Super disappointing they killed it.

    AKIKA FUJITA: I mean, it was such a short-lived feature.

    - It was-- It was as fleeting as the product itself.

    AKIKA FUJITA: Well, I mean, I wasn't-- it's too easy. I wasn't
    going to go there. Yeah.

    DAN HOWLEY: Look, I do think that there's-- there's some utility
    here. I don't think that it's going to be a major product for
    Twitter. And look, when Elon Musk comes in, you know, he might
    just say, I don't know. This is dumb. We'll get rid of it.

    So it may or may not last long. But my thinking is, you know,
    I'm playing a game called "Elden Ring" right now, right? If I
    want to talk exclusively about "Elden Ring," I can invite a
    bunch of people, and then we could just chat about it, you know,
    and I can--

    - But there's Discord.

    DAN HOWLEY: That's true. But I don't like Discord. I don't want
    to talk to people. I don't want that. I want to just be able to
    write to them. Don't talk to me.

    AKIKA FUJITA: By the way, I saw a photo the other day of
    somebody holding a sign that said, Elon, bring Vine back, which
    I think a lot of people would be on board with. This idea,
    though, you know, when you think back to what social media was--
    right? I mean, obviously, Facebook started with colleges. But
    something like Twitter, it was about connecting with people that
    you don't know.

    DAN HOWLEY: Right, on a smaller scale.

    AKIKA FUJITA: You can connect with somebody on the other side of
    the world. And it feels like because of the environment on
    social media today, we're all turning inward again.

    DAN HOWLEY: Yeah, I mean, look, I think that this kind of
    feature is interesting in that it does allow you to connect with
    people of similar interests, right? I think that for Twitter,
    especially, I've said-- I said it yesterday. Twitter is just a
    vast hellscape, right? And I-- I try to avoid it as much as
    possible, except for work.

    But, you know, if I had something like this where I could set up
    a couple of circles for just friends, you know-- I have WhatsApp
    groups already. But, you know, if I wanted to have people that
    I'm not necessarily super close with, I could set up a circle
    and then discuss things with them.

    Here's the weird thing, though. Someone can add you, and you
    can't leave the circle.

    - Oh, interesting.

    DAN HOWLEY: Right? So you have to then mute the circle, which I
    don't really appreciate. The other thing is that you can just
    kick someone out if you want, and they'll never know. So it
    seems--

    - Do people see if you're in a circle?

    DAN HOWLEY: They can't see if you're in a circle that other
    people aren't a part of. So you can see other people retweeting.

    AKIKA FUJITA: It is about always being able to quietly back out.

    - Well, I mean, you know.

    DAN HOWLEY: Yeah, it's the exclusiveness, right? And you can--
    you can say, you know, OK, I'm part of a circle. I tweet
    something or retweet something within the circle. I can see
    other people that retweet it, but I can't know exactly who else
    is in that circle with me. So it's-- it's very strange. It seems
    like kind of a half-baked idea at this point. But I do see that
    the utility of it to a degree.

    AKIKA FUJITA: Well, the idea being that Twitter still wants
    people on the platform, but not necessarily experience the
    hellscape that you have described--

    - The landos, the eggs.

    AKIKA FUJITA: --on the platform.

    - Yeah

    DAN HOWLEY: Yeah.

    AKIKA FUJITA: I actually would argue that-- I mean, maybe my
    Twitter feed is more curated than yours. Because I--

    DAN HOWLEY: Mine is a wreck.

    AKIKA FUJITA: I would much rather have tweets and read tweets
    from people I don't know. Because to me, that opens it up to
    other conversation.

    - And that brings up, like, is this going to silo things
    further. But, you know, it's an interesting product. We'll see
    if it sticks. For what it's worth, I'm going to start a, "The
    Batman" was actually bad--

    DAN HOWLEY: Whoa!

    - --circle. Yep.

    DAN HOWLEY: I'm out of here.

    - And you're not-- you're not invited, Dan Howley.

    DAN HOWLEY: I'm leaving.

    https://news.yahoo.com/twitter-pilots-circle-feature-lets-
    160616248.html

    Brad Sherman sucks cocks.

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