Account holders also blocked from sharing aggregator sites

Twitter announces ban on users promoting rival social media platforms

Policy shift bars users from tweeting their Facebook, Instagram handles, among others, in latest controversial move by owner Elon Musk

Illustrative: Icons of social media applications LinkedIn, YouTube, Pinterest, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, as displayed on a smartphone on May 28, 2020. (Olivier DOULIERY/AFP)
Illustrative: Icons of social media applications LinkedIn, YouTube, Pinterest, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, as displayed on a smartphone on May 28, 2020. (Olivier DOULIERY/AFP)

SAN FRANCISCO, California — Twitter announced Sunday that it would no longer allow users to promote their accounts from a host of other social media platforms, including Facebook and Instagram — the latest policy change by the company under its controversial new owner Elon Musk.

The move — which also affects Mastodon, Post, and Truth Social, as well as third-party social media link aggregators such as linktr.ee and ink.bio — comes after users started encouraging their followers to view their posts elsewhere, given the sea changes at Twitter.

“Going forward, Twitter will no longer allow free promotion of specific social media platforms,” it said in a statement.

“At both the Tweet level and the account level, we will remove any free promotion of prohibited 3rd-party social media platforms, such as linking out (i.e., using URLs) to any of the below platforms on Twitter, or providing your handle without a URL,” the company explained.

Users would thus be barred, for example, from posting “Follow me @username on Instagram,” Twitter said.

First-time violators will face actions “ranging from requiring deletion of one or more Tweets to temporarily locking account(s),” Twitter said.

A phone screen displays a photo of Elon Musk with the Twitter logo shown in the background, in Washington, DC, October 4, 2022. (Olivier Douliery/AFP)

“Any subsequent offenses will result in permanent suspension.”

Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey questioned the new policy with a one-word tweet: “Why?”

Changes under Musk

The move was the latest in a growing series of controversies generated by the mercurial billionaire in the short time since he bought Twitter in late October, including layoffs and reinstatement of some far-right accounts.

In recent days, Musk suspended the accounts of several journalists — most recently, Washington Post reporter Taylor Lorenz — after complaining that some had divulged details about the movements of his private jet which could endanger his family.

Shortly after taking over the platform, he announced the site would charge $8 per month to verify account holders’ identities, but had to suspend the “Twitter Blue” plan after an embarrassing rash of fake accounts. It has since been relaunched.

On November 4, with Musk saying the company was losing $4 million a day, Twitter laid off half of its 7,500-strong staff.

Musk also reinstated the account of banned former president Donald Trump and said Twitter would no longer work to combat COVID-19 disinformation.

The suspension of the journalists — employees of CNN, The New York Times, and The Washington Post were among those affected — has drawn sharp criticism, including from the European Union and the United Nations.

The US Federal Trade Commission said it was tracking developments at Twitter “with deep concern.”

Washington Post executive editor Sally Buzbee said the suspension of Lorenz’s account “further undermines Elon Musk’s claim that he intends to run Twitter as a platform dedicated to free speech.”

Some of the suspended accounts have since been reactivated.

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