Twitter at 20: How we lost the public square
Twenty years ago, Jack Dorsey changed the world. He opened his phone and sent a message to a new platform he had created: “just setting up my twttr”. That post carries the ID 20. (A post he shared ...
Source: www.fastcompany.com
Twenty years ago, Jack Dorsey changed the world. He opened his phone and sent a message to a new platform he had created: “just setting up my twttr”. That post carries the ID 20. (A post he shared last week has the ID 2032161152470565367—a small detail that captures how dramatically the platform has scaled in the intervening decades.) just setting up my twttr— jack (@jack) March 21, 2006 Following that first message, Dorsey’s short-form social network quickly cemented its role in our digital lives. In 2009, as a plane landed on the Hudson River in New York, users followed events in real time as people posted from the scene. In 2011, Sohaib Athar, then living in Abbottabad, Pakistan, inadvertently revealed the mission to kill Osama bin Laden because of a noisy helicopter… on Twitter. It became the place where the press and policymakers converged to discuss the state of the world. It was also where celebrities could interact directly with fans—or share record-breaking selfies, as E