Twitter is still recovering from the fallout of yesterday’s sizable attack on high-profile accounts, but it’s continuing to move forward with its plans to roll out a new version of its developer API.
The season of Twitter shakeups isn't over yet. The video featured is from a previous report. The social media platform has announced it will eliminate free API access for third-party developers. While ...
Twitter's API has spawned hundreds of mashups and third party software apps, but now it's growing even further -- outside sites have begun mimicking an API to piggyback on Twitter clients. It started ...
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Now, though, Twitter is trying to rebuild some of these bridges. The API v2 offers third-party developers access ...
Twitter is rolling out changes to its newly rebuilt API that will allow third-party developers to build tools and other solutions specifically for its audio chatroom product, Twitter Spaces. The ...
Twitter will start charging developers to get access to its API, a vital tool that powers popular services like TweetDelete and bots that send users prompts on data in real time. The microblogging ...
In the middle of the night, Twitter made an announcement that disappointed a wide range of developers whose research, bots, and apps depend on free access to the platform’s API to function. Twitter ...
Since Twitter launched in 2006, the company has acted as a kind of heartbeat for social media conversation. That’s partly because it’s where media people go to talk about the media, but also because ...