3.26.2018

Monday Buzz: Is Twitter Automation More Difficult?

By / March 26, 2018 (dem10 / iStock / Getty Images Plus)

Were the good practices of social networks defeated? At least one company is changing its approach in response to the new rules, but others are not following it. Plus, dive into the new season with these spring cleaning tips for nonprofit organizations.

In an attempt to crack down on spammers, Twitter recently introduced a new rule that could ultimately hurt some people automating tweets that do not create spam.

Under the terms of Twitter usage, users can no longer post duplicate tweets in different accounts. It makes sense as an anti-spam effort. But the interpretation of the rules found in the Twitter site's automation policies is causing some confusion. The rule says, "You can not publish duplicate or essentially similar tweets in a single account or in multiple accounts that you run."

( A tweet in the Twitter Developer account adds that "publishing identical tweets for several hours or days, or publishing duplicate content for later publication still violates our policies.").

Popular tool for the automation of social networks Meet Edgar implements this rule in the most severe conditions . This means that users are no longer allowed to recycle identical tweets to the same account. This is common among many social media users who often use the best tweets.

"Whether you recycle your tweets into multiple or a Twitter account, it's officially against the rules and Twitter is now applying these rules more rigorously than ever before," the company writes in a blog post . "This means in the future that you should expect planning tools that enable automatic content recycling to stop providing this service for Twitter accounts."

But that's not the case with all social automation tools, at least not yet. Associations now   Ernie Smith has contacted Buffer , who says he still wants to allow users to recycle tweets in the same account. However, the buffer prevents users from selecting multiple accounts for the same tweet.

Time for the spring cleaning

Ready for spring? The members of MemberClicks are and they share some great non-profit spring cleaning hacks to help you feel revived.

Start by thoroughly cleaning your inbox. "When emails are not read and accumulated, it can become a legitimate nuisance that interferes with their ability to be productive," writes Krissy Conant. "You can not know what projects you need to do if you have not read all of your correspondence!"

Conant recommends blocking for 15 to 20 minutes a day to eliminate the delay.

Other hint links

Still good Facebook statistics? The M + R blog shares the steps you should follow .

General resources for nonprofit organizations are often poorly understood. AF non-profit comes to the defense of the financing cube.

Come back after the PTO often has a lot of catching up to do. The Matrix Group Blog shows you how to make your first day more productive .

Let's block the advertising! (Why?)

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire