Twitter’s test of an expanded 280-character limit is aimed at luring new
users, but some of the social network’s passionate loyalists fear the
change will strip it of its unique appeal.
If implemented broadly, the longer tweets could profoundly change the
nature of the one-to-many messaging platform which is popular with
journalists and politicians but has struggled to boost its broader user
base.
Twitter says the change may draw in more users and reduce the
frustration faced by those who struggle to encapsulate their wit and
wisdom within the 140-character limit.
But some members of the “Twitterverse” argue it would not be Twitter anymore if users are allowed to ramble.
“The 140-character limit has been a defining feature, forcing brevity
and making streams of tweets very easy to consume,” Jan Dawson of
Jackdaw Research said in a blog post.
“Even just looking at the first few 280-character tweets I’ve seen from
Twitter executives has broken up my feed and forced a mental shift in my
consumption.”
Writing in The Guardian, Australian novelist and commentator Dominic
Knight said, “Brevity is the soul of Twitter. We don’t need 280
characters to say that.”
Many Twitter users – already notoriously sceptical of previous updates to the platform – heaped scorn on the idea.
“Twitter can’t shorten my attention span for 8 years, then expect me to
start paying attention to #280character tweets,” one user wrote.
Another tweeter commented: “The world is fighting enough wars
already.@Twitter should not add a war between brevity and verbosity into
the mix, please no.”
Twitter chief executive Jack Dorsey offered his defence of the move in a series of tweets.
Twitter expects and appreciates “all the snark & critique....Comes with the job,” Dorsey wrote.
“What matters now is we clearly show why this change is important, and
prove to you all it’s better. Give us some time to learn and confirm (or
challenge!) our ideas.”
Many comments focused on US President Donald Trump, who uses the
platform for policy announcements and for spontaneous remarks on many
topics.
Twitter indicated Trump won’t be part of the test group.
“Do not give Donald Trump an excuse to tweet more nonsense,” one user tweeted.
Another user wrote: “This new Twitter 280 character thing is huge –
especially for Trump. Now he can say stupider things more bigly.”
Some users said the change could have a positive impact by allowing for more detailed and complex messages.
“I find the character expansion on Twitter to be a great plus for the
public sphere and activism,” said Zeynep Tufekci, a University of North
Carolina sociologist who studies Twitter as a tool for social change.
“While the brevity has its advantages, 140 characters was too little,
and often lent itself to needless misunderstandings as people could not
put in more nuance and context.”
A “small group” of users will see the new limits before Twitter decides
on rolling out the changes more broadly, the company said.
Some analysts said the change was unlikely to provide a major boost for
Twitter, which has seen its user base stagnate and has failed to keep up
with faster-growing social networks like Facebook and Facebook-owned
Instagram.