December 27, 2024
Twitter Intentionally Suspended Third Party Apps Like Tweetbot: Report
Twitter reportedly suspended third-party clients on purpose, including Tweetbot. According to a report citing Twitter’s internal Slack communication, the suspension was intentional and not because of a bug. Tweetbot's co-creator also claimed the same after the app briefly came back on after changing API keys, only to lose access again.

Twitter became inaccessible via third-party apps last week. Now it appears that the Elon Musk-owned microblogging site has intentionally suspended popular third-party Twitter clients, including Tweetbot. According to a report, Twitter’s move to bar third-party apps was intentional, and users can now only access the platform via the official Twitter app. Additionally, Tweetbot co-creator Paul Haddad also confirmed that the suspension appears to be on purpose. Tweetbot was working again for a few hours on Sunday after it used a workaround, but was soon inaccessible for users on iOS. This, according to Haddad, was proof that Twitter was intentionally revoking access for third-party clients.

The Information reports that the block, which began affecting third-party twitter app users last week, is intentional. The report cites Twitter’s internal Slack communication, which reportedly confirms the decision. Neither Twitter nor its CEO Elon Musk have, however, provided a reason for the suspension.

Haddad, in a Mastodon post, also said that Tweetbot did not receive “even a shred of communication” from Twitter ahead of the suspension, while confirming that the third-party app was down again. “And now dead again, along with some old unused API keys, which proves that this was intentional and we and others were specifically targeted,” he wrote.

Haddad elaborated in a separate post that he had not received any communication, officially or unofficially, from anyone at Twitter, even after the app went down, briefly returned, and went down again. “Even without these leaks if you add up the lack of communication, only impacting the top 25-50 Twitter API clients and clients showing up as suspended in the dev. Dashboard,” he wrote. “The only conclusion at this point is that it was intentional and not any kind of bug.”

Tweetbot briefly seemed to be working again when they swapped out their API keys, and a Gadgets360 staff member was able to log in to the service before it was inaccessible again, earlier on Monday. An API is a software interface that allows communication between two or more programs. All Twitter third-party clients utilise the Twitter API to access the service.

According to tweets from an iOS developer-duo that goes by ‘Mysk’ on twitter (@mysk_co), Tweetbot started working with some restrictions after it used new API credentials for the app. Users, however, could only share 300 posts per 15 minutes. “Twitter API is not broken,” the developers said. While Tweetbot’s return was short-lived, popular third-party client Twitterrific continues to remain suspended.

On Friday, users began reporting that they were unable to access their accounts on third-party apps like Twitterrific, Tweetbot, and Fenix on both Android and iOS via the microblogging website. Gadgets360 was able to confirm that Twitterific and Tweetbot on iOS and Fenix on Android could not access Twitter.


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