Fast Company

07 CURRENT TWITTER VS. FUTURE TWITTER

FIGHTING TO WOO A NEW FLOCK WITHOUT SCATTERING THE OLD

Current users

PSYCHOLOGICAL PROFILE

Skittish. The Twitter faithful are prone to freak out over change—or even the specter of it (see #RIPTwitter)—which helps explain why the service has long evolved at a pace that’s leisurely by Internet standards.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fast Company

Fast Company1 min read
46 uncommon
WHEN ELECTRONIC ARTS NEEDED TO REBR AND ITS $2 BILLION soccer vedio game FIFA after a financial dispute with the global sport's governing body, it tapped the London-based agency Uncommon for the job—perhaps the most daunting marketing challenge of la
Fast Company2 min readPopular Culture & Media Studies
Finding Your People
THE DESIRE TO FEEL SUPported, included, and in community with others, online or IRL, is universal. But many huge social media apps today seem more adept at making users feel on the outs—or worse. Algorithmic and content-moderation changes at X (forme
Fast Company1 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
38 credo AI
AI: IT'S ALL FUN AND games until a company gets hurt. As CEOs hurry to pilot and implement new generative AI tools, their chief information officers have been worried about how to monitor and measure their products and systems for such things as bias

Related Books & Audiobooks