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Thanks to X showing us what users “like” on its platform, politician And the public I was watching obscene things In the past, offensive tweets were banned. Now, the platform formerly known as Twitter keeps likes mostly private. According to the company’s CEO Elon Musk,Facebook said this is a significant change that will allow people to “like posts without being attacked.” The company originally introduced the ability to hide the Likes tab as a perk for its X Premium subscribers last year.[K]Epspicy likes his privacy,” X said. Announced New features.
This week, we’re making likes private to all users to better protect your privacy.
– You will still be able to see posts that you’ve liked (but no one else will be able to see them).
– The number of likes and other metrics for your posts will still appear in notifications.
– You can no longer see who is who…
— Engineering (@XEng) June 11, 2024
In a new tweet, X’s engineering account revealed that this week the social network will make likes private to everyone. Users will no longer be able to see who has liked other people’s posts, meaning likes on the platform will no longer pose a PR crisis for public figures who like sexual, hateful, or generally offensive posts. However, they will still be able to see who has liked their tweets, the number of likes their posts have, and other metrics.
But the move removes one reason to get a premium subscription: The company’s advertising revenue plummeted last year, and it introduced two new tiers to its subscription service to help ease its financial woes. The Premium+ tier costs $16 a month and removes ads from your timeline, while the cheapest tier costs $3 a month and doesn’t come with the blue checkmark on the website.