Elon Musk says X will end ‘block’ function for users outside private messages

FAN Editor

Billionaire Elon Musk said Friday that he plans to end the “block” function on social media platform X.

X, formerly known as Twitter, currently offers a standard block function that allows users to restrict others’ ability to comment on their posts — but that function may come to an end soon.

“Block is going to be deleted as a ‘feature,’ except for [direct messages],” Musk said Friday. “It makes no sense.”

MUSK APPEARS TO LEAK ZUCKERBERG PRIVATE MESSAGES AS META CEO SAYS ‘TIME TO MOVE ON’ FROM CHARITY FIGHT

“You will still be able to mute accounts and block users for [direct messages],” Musk clarified via a comment in a separate thread.

Blocking is a nearly universal feature of social media platforms that is intended to allow users to end communication with others whose posts they feel are offensive, threatening or otherwise undesirable.

MUSK’S X SENDING BIRD SIGNS, OFFICE DECOR FROM TWITTER DAYS TO AUCTION FOR $25 STARTING BIDS

Musk’s off-the-cuff comments come amidst a larger campaign to severe the platform’s ties to its Twitter-era aesthetics and interface.

The billionaire owner has already drastically altered key features of the app, such as changing its “verification” services — previously used to ensure the authenticity of accounts bearing a public figure’s likeness or name — to a subscription-based amplifier for users’ posts.

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

X has also rolled out new opportunities for users with large audiences to monetize their content based on engagement and view count.

An auction and asset advisory firm will sell hundreds of items from the social media site’s days as Twitter in a mid-September auction.

More than 750 items in the two-day online auction include a variety of pieces, with some more specific to X’s former Twitter branding than others, per Heritage Global Partners’ website. Bidding for them is scheduled to commence the morning of Sept. 12. 

Fox News Digital’s Aislinn Murphy contributed to this report.

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Injection Protects Babies from RSV Hospitalization, Has Not Been Linked to Deaths

SciCheck Digest Each year, respiratory syncytial virus hospitalizes 58,000 to 80,000 children under age 5 in the U.S. The Food and Drug Administration recently approved an antibody injection for babies to protect them during the RSV season. There isn’t evidence the shots have killed any babies, contrary to social media […]

You May Like