Twitter is killing free API access.

Will most devs pay for access? No thanks.

If what happened to 3rd party clients proves true, I have a feeling many devs will move their efforts to the Fediverse.

https://twitter.com/TwitterDev/status/1621026986784337922

Twitter Dev on Twitter

“Starting February 9, we will no longer support free access to the Twitter API, both v2 and v1.1. A paid basic tier will be available instead 🧵”

Twitter

@atomicpoet let's not forget that the Fediverse still has entry barriers and a learning curve for those who aren't tech-savvy.

This would be the perfect moment for us to slay whatever is left of Twitter and convince everyone to move to the Fedi. Elon's sheer imbecility is literally providing with assists on a daily basis - from banning journalists, to promising zero censorship against the fascist, to actively working to compromise the stability of the platform, to turning Twitter's working environment into a toxic mix of chauvinism and stakanovism, to closing the APIs and killing 3rd-party clients, to the mess with the new verification program...

And, indeed, every time Elon decides to set a new bar for what being a true idiot means, Mastodon and the Fediverse get a new ripple of users.

But those ripples don't stay long. Looking at the stats of new users, one can easily overlap the peaks with Elon's acts of stupidity, but it's also true that not many of those who join in those ripples stick around.

It means that, no matter how bad other platforms are, most of the people still have trouble, for some reason, using a free and decentralized alternative that isn't run by any sociopath billionaire.

@atomicpoet btw I'm a HUGE fan of APIs and 3rd-party clients. But we should also be careful about the fragmentation effect - something that has already been affecting Linux since its birth.

Walk for a moment in the shoes of the average Joe - not the Twitter geek, not the IT enthusiast.

Joe wants to share stuff with his friends on some social platform. He learns about Twitter. He creates an account, logs in, starts posting. End.

Now Joe learns about the Fedi. And people start asking him - which platform? Mastodon? Pleroma? Diaspora? Which server? Which client? And, by the time Joe is asked the third question, he's already walked away.

As an engineer and an open-source enthusiast, I often believe that all people want and need is more choice and a more customized experience. But every time people surprise me by choosing the solution that gives them the least amount of choice and power, as long as it's something that has close to zero entry barriers.

@Fabio Manganiello @Chris Trottier My tactic for dealing with that is to create communities that people want to join, revolving around content and discussion boards, and giving them a fediverse account for free. They join for my website's community and content, and then perhaps later they realize they can talk to the entire fediverse. It is a way of onboarding people into the fediverse that don't even know what the fediverse is yet.