Tag: platform
Deployteq Ramps Up UK Operation With ‘No-Code’ Marketing Automation Platform
The leading self-service marketing automation provider Deployteq, is targeting growth in the UK market with its user-friendly ‘no code’ platform, putting…
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SentinelOne experiments with GPT-4 as part of new threat hunting platform
Livestreaming platform Mandolin closes down
A Chat with Rob Harlow, Co-Founder and CINO at SaaS Platform: Outbase
Outbase is a SaaS platform that helps businesses achieve more success with their sales prospecting. We launched the platform in…
The post A Chat with Rob Harlow, Co-Founder and CINO at SaaS Platform: Outbase appeared first on TechRound.
After NPR left the platform, Twitter removed all ‘government-funded media’ labels
Twitter has removed labels describing certain media outlets as “government funded” or “state affiliated,” after falsely implying they were government propaganda machines.
Fierce backlash from editorially independent media outlets like NPR and the BBC ensued after Elon Musk’s Twitter inaccurately classified them as controlled by their governments. But after the organizations were forced to prove their independence and combat the threat of public mistrust, it all seems to be a moot point since the labels no longer exist.
Earlier this April, Twitter added a label to NPR’s Twitter page describing it as “US state-affiliated media,” which Twitter defined as “outlets where the state controls editorial content through funding or political pressure,” per Gizmodo. The label put NPR in the same category as China’s Xinhua News and Russia’s RT and Sputnik which are widely considered to be government-controlled propaganda machines.
Following an email exchange with NPR reporter Bobby Allyn who told Twitter CEO Elon Musk that NPR only receives one percent of government funding, Musk changed the label to “Government Funded Media.” The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), and Voice of America also had the new “Government Funded” label, despite also being editorially independent.
The slightly different semantic classification was still unacceptable for NPR, and it left the platform. Efforts to “tarnish the independence of any public media institution are exceptionally harmful and set a dangerous precedent,” said NPR CEO John Lansing.
But now, after all that, Musk has decided to drop media labels altogether. “This was Walter Isaacson’s suggestion,” Musk told NPR’s Allyn in an exchange. Isaacson, an author and journalist who wrote Steve Jobs’ biography is working on a biography of Musk.
And that’s probably as much of an explanation as we’ll ever get.
A Chat with Orlando Agrippa, Founder and CEO at Health Tracking Data Platform: Sanius Health
Sanius Health is a patient-generated health data tracking platform dedicated to improving the lives and wellbeing of people living with…
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Coro raises $75M for all-in-one platform to tackle SOC complexity
Microsoft drops Twitter from its advertising platform
Twitter is being removed from yet another big B2B platform. And this time it’s one of the biggest companies in the tech industry.
Microsoft is going to drop Twitter from its Microsoft Advertising plan next week, according to the company.
“Starting on April 25, 2023, Smart Campaigns with Multi-platform will no longer support Twitter,” Microsoft said. A similar email has begun to go out to Microsoft Advertising users stating that “Digital Marketing Center (DMC) will no longer support Twitter starting on April 25, 2023.”
From that date, users will no longer be able to access their Twitter account through its Digital Marketing Center’s social media management tool, according to Microsoft. Users will also no longer be able to schedule, create, or manage tweets or tweet drafts. In addition, users won’t be able to view their past tweets and engagement on the Microsoft Advertising platform.
Microsoft’s announcement comes just one day after Twitter owner Elon Musk appeared at a major marketing and advertising conference. At the event, Musk attempted to lure brands back to the platform after Twitter lost half of its biggest advertisers following his takeover of the company.
The Microsoft Advertising feature previously allowed advertisers to manage their social media accounts on various platforms in one place. Users could respond to tweets and DMs along with messages received on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn.
While Microsoft’s social media service was provided for free to advertisers, it was prominently featured in Microsoft Advertising’s Digital Marketing Center dashboard. It worked alongside the platform’s social and search paid advertising tools, which helped businesses run and manage their paid ad campaigns on platforms like Google Ads, Facebook and Instagram, and Microsoft’s search advertising.
Companies that use Microsoft Advertising will still be able to manage and create content for Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn through the platform, just as they were able to before.
Microsoft made more than $12 billion in digital advertising revenue last year from ads that would be created, managed, and run through its Advertising platform.
Credit: Mashable screenshot
The company added the notice on a user support page for its Smart Campaigns multi-platform social media management feature, which is one of two main features in its Digital Marketing Center dashboard. As previously mentioned, emails have also begun to go out informing users of the change.
Mashable reached out to Microsoft for comment. A representative said that the company had nothing further to share at this time.
Twitter’s pricey new API plan continues to alienate the company
The removal of Twitter integrations from its Microsoft Advertising platform comes just days before Elon Musk’s Twitter plans to shutdown its old API platform. According to Twitter, it is fully transitioning to its new paid Twitter API subscription plans on April 29.
Twitter’s new Enterprise plans for API access have a starting cost of $42,000 per month.
Since Twitter announced its exorbitantly high API access pricing, many indie developers have had to close down their Twitter-based applications. However, just like Microsoft, other larger companies and organizations have also made the decision to pass on paying Twitter too.
Intercom, a leader in the online customer service space, announced it was dropping Twitter integrations from its platform last week due to the new API pricing. The National Weather Service (NWS), a federal U.S. government agency, told Mashable yesterday that Twitter users should no longer depend on its emergency alert tweets after it loses Twitter API access.
The odd thing about Twitter’s stance here is that all of these companies, organizations, and applications created or helped facilitate the creation of content for Twitter’s platform. In turn, they all drove more eyeballs and traffic and encouraged more use of Twitter.
However, when forced to make business decisions regarding Twitter, it appears some companies are coming to the same conclusion as Sweden public radio. The country’s public broadcaster, Sveriges Radio, announced its decision on Tuesday to “completely stop being active” Twitter, citing continued changes to the platform and Twitter becoming “less important” to the outlet and its audience.