"We cannot release inactive usernames at this time," Twitter's policy still says.
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While some are also present in the Fediverse, there are still a good number of climate change scientists present on Twitter only (or I'm too stupid to find their mastodon handle). I like their informative tweets. And no, I don't read the responses to the original tweet. If you've read one denier shitstorm, you've read them all.
I deleted my account, I very much doubt it will ever actually be purged and if I allowed twitter's tracking stuff they'd be using it to sell info to data brokers until the company is dissolved.
Yawn.Ps: this website is a nest of virtue signaling people. It’s pathetic. Claiming they deleted their account…either lying or were not major users.
I believe grabbing NPR is one of those “it depends” things. I recall in the early days of the web, a person registered peta.org and set up a web site “People Eating Tasty Animals” with recipes for preparing meat dishes and an archive of death threat e-mails sent to the site by angry vegans. The animal rights organization was able to successfully wrestle the domain name away from the parody web site. I don’t recall if it was a call by the registrar Network Solutions to yank the registration, if the registrant was coerced into giving up the name, or if it landed court.As long as the new owner doesn't use the NPR logo or any copyrighted materials ...
I can make my new social media platform and create an NPR account on it without having to turn it over to NPR. They don't own the acronym.
Impersonating NPR without any of the logos, names, or materials ? If it's parody, it's clearly legal. If it's intentionally malicious, it can fall in the defamation case. But otherwise it mostly smells like First territory and a lawyer may be worth the fee.
Has any organisation succesfully migrated away from Oracle, witout discarding all of their old data?
I wonder what the legal ramifications of this policy change might be, considering users dont seem to have been notified of any change in the terms of service with regard to this policy.
"You have to check our policy regularly for things we might slip in otherwise unnoticed" does not make for a sound legal strategy in many countries...
It will be an interesting test of the move fast, break things philosophy versus staid bureaucracy. I’m thinking Musk’s Starship versus the NASA Orion/Artemis. Right now, both those projects are moving towards or are already at massive schedule slip. We’ll have to see if repeatedly blowing up rockets versus hyper analysis before doing anything is the less costly or faster way to achieve the ultimate goal.I pre-empted Twitter several months ago, as I couldn't see the platform stabilising, so deleted my accounts.
Now to get Facebook to do the same.
I haven't logged on in nearly two years, but last time I tried to delete my accounts I couldn't because I was a moderator for a page where the admin had gone AWOL, so FB wouldn't let me delete my account, or something like that.
Mark Zuckerberg for all his flaws, seems to be a more astute operator than Elon Musk. He knows that users are product, and engaging in personal vendettas against product is a dumb thing to do.
"Move fast and break things" is ok up to a point, but being so offensive and arbitrary with decisions that a good portion of your product wants to leave is not.
A rocket doesn't have hurt feelings if it explodes, and another one can be made within months, but humans have long memories, and once they're gone, they're not likely to be easily replaced.
Social media is not rocket science, but that seems to be something Elon doesn't get.
Counterpoint - Nissan Motors still does not own nissan.com, despite many years of litigation and attempts to take the name from Uzi Nissan, who unfortunately died in 2020 due to COVID.I believe grabbing NPR is one of those “it depends” things. I recall in the early days of the web, a person registered peta.org and set up a web site “People Eating Tasty Animals” with recipes for preparing meat dishes and an archive of death threat e-mails sent to the site by angry vegans. The animal rights organization was able to successfully wrestle the domain name away from the parody web site. I don’t recall if it was a call by the registrar Network Solutions to yank the registration, if the registrant was coerced into giving up the name, or if it landed court.
Edited: punctuation, improve readability of last sentence
The peta.org incident landed in court, and the ruling against the parody website holder seems primarily down to the courts determination that the owner was cybersquatting, since he registered other domains for cybersquatting, and had urged PETA to make an offer for the domain.I believe grabbing NPR is one of those “it depends” things. I recall in the early days of the web, a person registered peta.org and set up a web site “People Eating Tasty Animals” with recipes for preparing meat dishes and an archive of death threat e-mails sent to the site by angry vegans. The animal rights organization was able to successfully wrestle the domain name away from the parody web site. I don’t recall if it was a call by the registrar Network Solutions to yank the registration, if the registrant was coerced into giving up the name, or if it landed court.
The journalists have been hugely disappointing thru this whole saga.And despite never tweeting, I heard about it.
Because journalists treat twitter posts as press releases. It's faster and easier than waiting for a properly formatted press release on a company/country/personality's website.
If they stopped, the whole house of cards would collapse much faster.
I would like them to stop.
Yawn.
Come up with something original at least. Bet you're a badge-renter.
Counterpoint - Nissan Motors still does not own nissan.com, despite many years of litigation and attempts to take the name from Uzi Nissan, who unfortunately died in 2020 due to COVID.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_Motors_v._Nissan_Computer
You left out their creative (mis)interpretations of past statements.Sheesh. You'd think they'd at least come up with some new material instead of continuing to play the old hits like some sort of sad cover band. Sunspots! Urban heat islands! CO2 is good for plants! Natural variability! Vast scientific conspiracy! Yawn. Where's the creativity?
And then verifying themselves with the blue verified badgeCan’t wait for the trolls and bots to start claiming the accounts of dead people, nosiree!
I cannot access my account since some y*rk is asking me to pay for blue sh*t or remove my sms verification, since neither of the options are an option for me I wont access it anymore, you are more than welcome to delete my account y*rk!
Twitter "policy" is whatever Elon Musk thinks up that morning while sitting on the toilet with his armed guards outside the door.Some dared to dream that Twitter's decision means that long-inactive coveted handles might soon become available. Right now, it does not seem like Twitter has any intention of letting users claim inactive usernames, but Musk moves fast, and that policy could change any day. Twitter's policy still states that "we cannot release inactive usernames at this time."
I created an account way back when on a lark (never tweeted, never followed anyone). When I tried to log in soon after the Elon acquisition, it complained it had been inactive too long, I would have to reset my password, AND give it a phone number. Fuck that. So I just left it dormant. I'm glad they're finishing the job for me now
Go ahead and delete it. You suspended my account due to a couple of comments I made months ago. I appealed that move and absolutely nothing has happened since. I'm not retracting my comments just to get the account unlocked, so... Do your worst.
No, NPR is a professional organization. Something like the following would be more appropriate: "This is the NPR Twitter account. See <URL on NPR's website> for NPR's official policy on its use of Twitter."No no, I think it should be something like:
This post is compelled speech: Musk is a (*$&%$ing *($&^hole and a free-speech absolutist.
Twitter "policy" is whatever Elon Musk thinks up that morning while sitting on the toilet with his armed guards outside the door.
A prior poster provided a link to a video where the team working on the transition for Amazon celebrated the turning off of the last Oracle database.Google put much $ into it, and even they weren't able to abandon some stuff because there's simply no alternative to Oracle at that scale for some products.
Quite likely they spent more on lawyers than had just made the guy an offer.The peta.org incident landed in court, and the ruling against the parody website holder seems primarily down to the courts determination that the owner was cybersquatting, since he registered other domains for cybersquatting, and had urged PETA to make an offer for the domain.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People_for_the_Ethical_Treatment_of_Animals_v._Doughney
No reminder needed! It sounds like he will delete it for you!Thanks for reminding me to delete my account, Elon.
You mean like coming to a website and making sure everyone knows what actions you do and don't value?virtue signaling