After vowing to crack down on bots and spammers, Twitter has suspended several high-profile accounts for attempting to game the system by using mass-retweets and stolen content to gain popularity.
Some of the suspended accounts, including @dory and @memeprovider, had millions of followers. It's unknown whether the suspensions are permanent.
According to Buzzfeed, some of these account holders are known as 'Tweetdeckers' for their use of teaming up with other users to retweet each other's content en masse via Tweetdeck – Twitter's own dashboard web app.
This is strictly against Twitter's terms of use, which it reiterated last month when it announced a crackdown on third-party apps that allow users to make posts and retweets automatically.
Enforcement action
The rules for app developers are due to come into force on March 23, but it seems the site has got a head-start on accounts that have gained hundreds of thousands of followers through less than honest means.
“To be clear: Twitter prohibits any attempt to use automation for the purpose of posting or disseminating spam, and such behaviour may result in enforcement action,” said Yoel Roth, Twitter's head of API policy and product trust.
To comply with its own rules, Twitter updated Tweetdeck to remove the ability to retweet or like messages through several accounts simultaneously.
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Twitter's CEO Jack Dorsey recently admitted the site has serious problems with "abuse, harassment, troll armies, manipulation through bots and human coordination, misinformation campaigns, and increasingly divisive echo chambers," and asked for help assessing the 'health' of the platform.
These recent suspensions are the first sign of the site taking direct action against users manipulating the site, though Dorsey's plan to measure the quality of conversations on the site means it might be several months before we see more widespread changes.
- Keep on track of your own tweets with the best Twitter clients for Windows
Via The Verge
Cat is TechRadar's Homes Editor specializing in kitchen appliances and smart home technology. She's been a tech journalist for 15 years, and is here to help you choose the right devices for your home and do more with them. When not working she's a keen home baker, and makes a pretty mean macaron.