According to a report, Twitter has allegedly been throttling users who attempt to share New York Times articles for several months. This means that Twitter has been limiting the visibility of tweets that contain links to New York Times articles, potentially impacting the reach and engagement of such content. Users have claimed that their tweets were not showing up in search results or relevant hashtag feeds. The report suggests that this action by Twitter may be a response to pressure from the US Department of Homeland Security. The social media platform has not yet provided an official statement on the matter..
Elon Musk-owned X has reportedly throttled users trying to share articles produced by the New York Times for the past several months.
The precipitous drop in engagement with content from the Gray Lady has been noticeable since July and seems worse than from other major news providers like Politico and the Washington Post, the news site Semafor reported Friday.
Semafor pointed to data compiled by social media engagement tracking firm NewsWhip, which monitored 300,000 influential users of the site formerly known as Twitter over a five-month period.
A chart provided by NewsWhip shows weekly average shares per article from the influencers dropping from more than 200 in July to less than 50 this month.
“There was a drop-off in engagement for NYT compared to the other sites in late July/early August,” NewsWhip spokesman Benedict Nicholson told Semafor.
NewsWhip did not include data from other platforms, like Facebook, however,
The Post reached out to X for comment.
Throttling websites and delaying access could turn off users, thus affecting traffic figures and dampening ad revenue for those sites.
Despite the hazy details of the report, The Washington Post first reported that X was throttling traffic at multiple websites.
The Times followed up that report with its own story entitled: “X Slows Down Access to Some Rival Sites.”
As part of the story, The Times noted that X delayed links to add on some rival platforms like Facebook and Instagram, as well as news sites like Reuters and The Times.
“Several of the services that were throttled have faced the ire of X’s owner, Elon Musk, The Times wrote, adding that the delay was about 4.5 second — which was “relatively minor” but “still noticeable.”
More recently, Times employees noted on X that some high-profile attempts to share Times articles failed to reach a big audience on the platform.
Semafor reported that earlier this week, former President Barack Obama shared multiple New York Times stories on X about healthcare costs, which the service said reached fewer than 900,000 and 800,000 users respectively.
According to the site, that number was far lower than any other post shared by the former president since X began sharing that data publicly earlier this year. For comparison, a Politico story shared by the former president got nearly 13 million views.
Semafor said that Times leadership is aware of the issue and is examining the root of the dropoff.
The Times did not comment.
Elon Musk-owned X has reportedly decreased engagement with articles from the New York Times compared to other news providers like Politico and the Washington Post. Data from social media engagement tracking firm NewsWhip showed a significant drop in shares per article from influential users. X has also delayed access to rival platforms and websites. The Times noted that the delay was relatively minor but still noticeable. Times employees have observed that high-profile attempts to share articles on X have failed to reach a large audience. The Times is aware of the issue but has not commented on it.
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