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Twitter Now Has “Edit Tweet” Button

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Twitter Now Has “Edit Tweet” Button

You asked for it, now you get it!

An edit button has been added to Twitter as of today. The edit button has been the most requested feature to date on Twitter, and the company is finally giving users what they have been asking for.

Amidst a high-profile court case over its future ownership and several other controversies to boot, Twitter today confirmed a new feature to edit tweets. It’s starting out with internal testing, and the plan is to make Edit Tweet functionality available to subscribers of its paid tier, Twitter Blue, later this month.

The edit button will be rolled out for the Twitter Blue subscribers in the coming weeks, the social media platform announced.
Twitter Blue is currently available only in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the U.S., and the firm hasn’t said what its plans are to roll out the subscription plan to other countries — much less what its plans are to roll out the Edit Tweet feature to the rest of its 237.8 million unpaid users.

In July, people criticized the company for increasing the subscription prices of Twitter Blue; perhaps the introduction of the Edit Tweet feature will offset that hike.

For those who will get the Edit Tweet feature, the rules are basic: eligible users will get a 30-minute window to mend their tweets and the edited tweet will show up with a label showing a timestamp of modification. People reading the tweet can tap the label to view the editing history of the tweet.

For those who have been following the progress of Twitter and the editing function, you’ll notice that this implementation is largely in line with app sleuths’ findings about the feature after Twitter officially announced it was working on an edit button in April. Last month, app researchers pointed out how edited tweets might behave when embedded on different sites. The firm said that embedded tweets won’t change on site even if they’re edited later to preserve the story’s original essence.

We have asked Twitter to clarify, and we’ll update the story if we hear back.

Notably, the social media platform already offers an “Undo Tweet” button to Twitter Blue subscribers that gives users a 30-second window to cancel posting a tweet if they spot any error. The company said it will continue to offer this feature after it launches the Edit Tweet button.

Some definite grey areas arise as a result of the rollout of an edit button.

For starters, it could potentially play a role in how Twitter gets appropriated by the media. These days, tweets — whether from companies, politicians, artists, businesspeople, or just ordinary people — are often used as the basis of news stories. Making those tweets editable will put the onus on publishers to track a tweet to check if its content has been changed. (Of course, it’s just one more thing for publishers to track since stories often evolve; and if a tweet gets embedded and then deleted that could also change a story.)

There is also a question mark over how regulators will look at an edited tweet when it comes to content that might violate a country’s laws.

The company said in the blog post that the purpose of the Edit Tweet feature is to “give people a short period of time to fix things like typos, add missed tags, and more.” However, there’s no restriction to what you can modify in a tweet and what consequences those edits might have.

“With Edit Tweet, we’re hoping to make Tweeting easier and more approachable, giving people more choice and control in how they express themselves and how they contribute to the many conversations happening on Twitter,” the company said in a blog post.

Twitter added that it’s introducing this feature to the smaller group of paid users to gather more feedback, including how people could misuse it — so that it can tune the edit button’s functionality accordingly.

“Since this is our most requested feature to date, we want to make sure we get it right,” it said.

That could imply that Twitter might make it more widely available over time, rather than a feature restricted only to those who are willing to pay for the privilege, only in those countries where Twitter has rolled out its paid tier.

The company has see-sawed on an edit function several times over the years

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