Elon Musk (File) Tesla and SpaceX’s CEO Elon Musk speaking at SATELLITE Conference and Exhibition March 9, … [+]
I’m following the destruction of Twitter prefer it’s a dumpster fire.
The dumpster is stuffed with cardboard. (Twitter Blue Verification becomes a service that costs money). Watch in horror as someone pours gas on the cardboard.
You possibly can see a match lit, preparing to ignite an inferno.
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Musk recently made an announcement in a conversation with Benjamin Netanyahu on livestream. Musk hinted that he could start charging people to make use of X, a former Twitter service which we still call by that name. That report by The Guardian quoted Musk as saying: “We’re moving to having a small monthly payment to be used of the system.”
This reasoning seems a bit suspect. In line with CNBC, Musk says there are too many bots, and by charging a small amount per 30 days for access, the service can eradicate what he called “an unlimited army of bots” which have invaded the service over the past several years.
Let’s peel back the layers here a bit of. Musk appears to have given up the fight in his battle against bots who could make accounts, act like real humans, and trolling other users. The bot army is a typical phenomenon that spies on web sites, social media sites and other platforms to get your information and scam you. The bots have turn into a significant problem, as they’re programmed to mimic human behavior and might defeat the various defenses built by tech corporations to maintain them at bay.
The answer to the issue doesn’t really make sense, though.
Musk’s suggestion is that this: The users themselvesPaying for the privilege to make use of a service which is freed from bot accounts can be preferable to attempting to work out find out how to remove the bots. (Bot armies are rampant, but they don’t prefer to pay subscription fees.) More critically, he’s suggesting that X is value paying for in the primary place.
This business model worked well with another services. Secure email is one example. Zivver is a superb example of an app that may be used to charge for email. Chances are you’ll be sending financial data or legal documents to your clients. This service is $7.20 a month.
X allows users to send links for cat videos. It’s a meme generator. You possibly can say every thing you don’t like a few politician. We comply with see ads and sponsored content because we don’t actually listen to the ads in the primary place. Charging for a service that’s barely useful reveals an entire misunderstanding of why we use the apps in the primary place. Imagine me, it’s not for sending legal documents to clients.
Here’s where things get interesting, though. Musk wants us to pay for X now, before it becomes the app he wants it to turn into — which could even have some usefulness or involve our funds ultimately. He hasn’t built that yet. He purchased Twitter at random, then realized that hundreds of thousands of users accounts might be transferred to a different app without him asking.
What could work? Musk needs to construct X before asking us to pay. The way in which it stands now, there’s really no reason to maintain using X, whether you just like the name or not.