Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Twitter may be keeping its 140 character limit after all, CEO says

Add as a preferred source on Google

Rumors have been steadily flowing about whether Twitter would lift its 140 character limit, but according to Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, the rumors have been heavily exaggerated.

“It’s staying,” Dorsey said in an interview with the Today Show. The interview marks the first time that the company has denied that the character limit will be changing.

Recommended Videos

Of course, let’s remember that this is the same Jack Dorsey who said last month that Twitter would not “reorder timelines,” in response to the social network’s new algorithmic timeline. Only a few days later Twitter began rolling out the new timeline that effectively reorders the posts based on what it thinks you’ll find interesting, instead of chronological order. Thankfully the new timeline can be switched off, however it’s still important to take what he says with a grain of salt.

In the end, Dorsey’s comments on the character limit may come down to semantics. It’s clear that the 140 character limit is here to stay, but that doesn’t mean that the company won’t bring in an option to write more, or write more under certain circumstances. Of late many users have been demonstrating the need for higher character limits by taking screenshots of long messages and posting the image rather than writing out the message as a tweet.

Dorsey only returned as CEO last year, after co-founding the company and originally serving as CEO until 2008. Since his return, Dorsey has been pushing for the company to completely rethink the way it operates. Compared to the timeline, changing the 140 character limit will arguably be an even bigger move, as Twitter has long revolved around posting quick thoughts (or microblogging) rather than long messages.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
X wants you to go live with its new streaming hub, and is offering $1 million to make it worth your while
Live Studio brings scheduling, audience controls, and real-time analytics to X's Creator Studio, but the platform hasn't said how it plans to split the $1 million among creators.
X Live Studio screengrab

X is making a serious push to become a destination for live video, launching a new tool called Live Studio and pledging $1 million in creator payouts to attract streamers to the platform. Nikita Bier, X's head of product, announced the tool on X with a demo showcasing how it works.

Stream controls, real-time analytics, and a $1 million payout

Read more
Reddit is ending anonymous browsing on old Reddit, and longtime users are not happy
Reddit's old interface is getting a login requirement, and its long term future looks uncertain.
Reddit

If you have been quietly browsing old.reddit.com without logging in, that option is going away. Reddit just announced it will require everyone to log in to use old.reddit.com, with the change landing sometime over the next month. A Reddit admin broke the news on the platform, calling it part of a push to tighten how automated systems get into the site.

Why is Reddit locking down the old interface?

Read more
TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, and YouTube are failing kids with broken safety features, research finds
Over half of social media child safety features don't work as advertised.
a boy using iPhone

Social media platforms have spent years telling parents their children are safe online. New research suggests those assurances don't hold up. A report from the Cybersafety Research Center tested 86 child safety features across TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, and YouTube. Only 35 worked as promised, and the rest were broken, buried in settings, or missing entirely.

Which social media platforms performed the worst on child safety?

Read more