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Twitter allows users to marginalize unwanted direct messages

Twitter allows users to marginalize unwanted direct messages



Twitter said on September 30 that it was offering a candidate to hide unwanted direct messages, providing a new tool to avoid abuse.

 Twitter users who receive direct messages from people who aren't following them on the platform will be able to automatically forward these errors to a secondary folder.

And Twitter tweeted last August: "Spam is not fun" The candidate also aims to capture messages that contain spam or offensive content, and tag them accordingly so that users can decide whether they want to open them.

"We tested and found that filters help you overcome noise to find the right message," Twitter said on Monday in a tweet.

Twitter has come under pressure to combat abuse on the platform known for letting anyone express themselves in the world in real time.

Earlier this year, the San Francisco-based company offered the option of hiding replies to tweets in some countries, an option that promised to help promote more logical online conversations.

"We know that scattered, inappropriate and trivial responses can disrupt the discussions that people want off track," said Michelle Yasmine, Twitter product manager and British forex product designer, when the filter filter tweet was announced.


"We believe that people should have some control over the conversations that they start," Agence France-Presse said.
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