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My company uses the Twitter API pretty heavily in our product, and it offers a pretty good value add for shared users. After the initial shutoff announcement we reached out to them and they maintained they there were no exceptions to the rule, and we'd have to pay them for access starting in 6 days. Doubly weird because they couldn't tell us what the pricing plan even was because they themselves hadn't figured it out yet.

We thought, whatever, we can live without the Twitter API. Then they gave us a one week extension while they negotiated a contract (we didn't want to negotiate anything), and then another extension. We simply said no both times, and prepared to proactively shut down our API use. Now it seems they have delayed it even further.

Reading between the lines, I'd say they expected that every company would roll over and start giving them millions of dollars with no notice for continued API use, and that didn't pan out like they thought.




They're doing an amazing job of demonstrating that they are totally clueless, and they don't know how to do market research.

That may not be true, it may all just be due to the dictates of Musk, but that's still the net effect.

If I was involved in relevant hiring, I'd be considering product managers from Twitter during this time frame to be questionable hires.


> product managers from Twitter during this time frame

I kind of assume they don't have any anymore. That would certainly be consistent with observed behaviour.


Indeed!

Lots and lots of the services such as mine have no revenue to pay with, never mind the dev time to go chasing wild geese!

In fact, I wonder if some people turned their services off preemptively, to avoid filling their logs with errors. I wrote a tweet kill switch into my code, to strip out all the support cleanly. I was tempted to throw it, but waited.




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