Apparently worth it Twitter they seem destined to never end. After Elon Musk’s takeover (and the tumultuous wave of mass layoffs), the social network is in chaos, to the point that last week the hashtag “#RipTwitter” came into vogue.
Apparently it’s not working now either copyright filter. In short, that filter that aims to prevent users from violating the intellectual property rights of movies, TV series, and so on. moral? Several users have started posting entire movies on the social network.
The copyright filter has gone haywire, the only limit left is the maximum playing time of Twitter posts. The social network does not allow sharing videos longer than 2 minutes. Thus, users are still forced to extract the movies into dozens of clips.
The most emblematic case is The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, which has been shared on the social network in recent days through more than 50 clips distributed in as many tweets. Meanwhile, after the post was shared and commented by thousands of users, the moderators intervened by removing the movie. It is not clear whether the copyright filter is fully operational again and we do not even know the reasons that led to the deactivation of the anti-piracy function. Elon Musk had ordered the deactivation of several “microservices” in an effort to make the application launch faster. Too bad the social engineers had also deactivated the receipt of two-factor authentication messages, which resulted in several users being locked out of their accounts for a few hours.
Source: Lega Nerd
