Twitter is moving away from allowing developers to access its Application Programming Interface (API) for free and will instead offer a paid basic tier, the Elon Musk-owned social media platform ...
Of all the once-unthinkable changes Elon Musk had made since taking over Twitter, pulling the rug out from under developers might seem relatively minor. After banning third-party clients without ...
A number of Twitter developers are expressing their disappointment with Twitter’s new API structure after recently announced changes that some say will still not meet their needs. On Wednesday evening ...
The loss of free access to Twitter's API will gut many third-party accessibility tools... and their advocates. Credit: Bob Al-Greene / Mashable No surprise here: Elon Musk has once again made Twitter ...
Twitter will start charging for access to their free API from February 9, meaning third-party software developers who access API data to promote their own projects, like bots on the app, will only ...
Earlier this month, Twitter announced that it is going to curtail free access to its API — the programming interface that lets third-party developers interact with Twitter. While the move certainly ...
In February of this year Elon Musk put Twitter’s API behind a paywall. A new survey reveals that over a 100 projects were impacted as a result. The Coalition for Independent Technology Research, a ...
These APIs provide developers with tools to access tweets, monitor hashtags, and analyze sentiment, making them ideal for data-driven strategies. When it comes to analyzing real-time conversations and ...
Twitter has shared more details about the upcoming changes to its API that will require most developers to pay in order to keep using its developer tools. In an update, the company said that there ...
Xbox players started to notice this week that Microsoft removed the ability to share screenshots and clips to Twitter straight from consoles or the Xbox Game Bar on Windows. Open up the sharing ...
Twitter, one of the world’s most popular (and currently controversial) social media platforms, extensively uses APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) in a number of ways to enable third-party ...