Did you know that when someone blocks you on video sex lesbianX (formerly Twitter), they can still reply to your posts? This opens up the possibility of abuse, with someone blocking you and then slandering, impersonating, or otherwise abusing you on the very same platform without you seeing it.
Now, X is changing the way blocking works. On Thursday, the company's Engineering account explained the changes as follows: "If a user who has blocked you replies to one of your posts, you will now be able to see their reply. This change enables you to identify and report any potential bad content that you previously could not view, safeguarding both your account and the overall integrity of our platform."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
X owner Elon Musk previously said the block functionality on X "makes no sense," and that it's going to be "deleted as a 'feature' except for DMs." While that hasn't happened yet, it appears that X is working towards changing the block feature until it's more in line with Musk's idea of the platform functioning as a "public town square."
"Our goal is to allow users to control their experience while maintaining the public visibility of posts," the post from X's Engineering team added.
An unresolved issue remains: Reporting abuse on X doesn't seem to do much. I've reported numerous scam accounts over the past couple of months, and they seem to just keep on appearing. The company's strategy of charging users for the "verified" blue checkmark hasn't done much to fix the problem, either.
Topics X/Twitter
This talented director is also really good at taking dad napsUgh, of course 'cryptomancing' is the newest dating trendTikTokkers are discovering a sex hack using pillows, but does it actually work?Apple might launch new MacBook Pro in October21 times Lupita Nyong'o absolutely killed it on InstagramSurprise! Venom is the superhero who defines this pandemic momentFacebook apologizes for that massive outage, says no user data was compromisedTake a peek at future Lyft rides in Motional's selfMazda finally goes electric, but its MXUber driver has a Spotify playlist for every kind of passenger he picks upFacebook is holding the world hostage. Here are the ways we might stop it.Small business owners reveal just how much the Facebook outage affected themFacebook apologizes for that massive outage, says no user data was compromisedThe epic 'Venom: Let There Be Carnage's midFacebook apologizes for that massive outage, says no user data was compromisedSenator's confused 'finsta' rant is a gift to Facebook executivesSenator's confused 'finsta' rant is a gift to Facebook executivesMy dude Kenneth accidentally took a $1,600 Uber rideSpacecraft swoops close to Mercury and snaps images of its wild surfaceFlorida man sues Twitter in a desperate bid to post again Listen: Sylvia Plath Reads “Daddy” by Sadie Stein Handsome Crooks, Crooked Reviewers by Sadie Stein Dead Authors at Fashion Week: Part 4 by Katherine Bernard Mimes, Tattoos, and Whales by Sadie Stein What We’re Loving: Myth, Legend, Umlauts by The Paris Review Dreaming in Welsh by Pamela Petro Singular, Difficult, Shadowed, Brilliant by Sadie Stein Never Fear! Your Mugs are Coming! by The Paris Review Best Lego deal: Lego F1 Collectible Race Cars 6 Introducing the Paris Review App! by The Paris Review Beat Letters, Literary Ink by Sadie Stein Document: Tim O’Brien’s Archive by Sarah Funke Butler Press Pass: Dorothy by Nicole Rudick Of Bloggers and Book Clubs by Sadie Stein The Mo Yan Culture Experience Zone, and Other News by Sadie Stein Arthurian Legend, Literary Restaurants by Sadie Stein Will Oldham on Bonnie “Prince” Billy by Alan Licht See You There: The Paris Review in L.A. by Sadie Stein In Which the Author Reads the Works of Albert Cossery: An Illustrated Essay, Part 2 by Nathan Gelgud In Search of Lost Time by Anna Wiener
2.3575s , 8588.5859375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【video sex lesbian】,Fresh Information Network