Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Twitter may have a new future if co-founder Evan Williams has his way

Add as a preferred source on Google

Just a month after heavy-hitting Twitter investor Chris Sacca penned a critical (yet aspirational) open letter to the social media platform, another one of Twitter’s own is giving his take on the company’s direction. In an interview Tuesday morning with journalist Walter Isaacson about the future of Twitter, Evan (Ev) Williams revealed that his hope is for Twitter to become a real-time news platform.

Williams explained: “I think Twitter is primarily a news system. From early on, we didn’t know what it was: a social network; microblogging was a thing a lot of people called it. In 2009, we made the distinction internally and the way we started talking about it was as a real-time information network. Since then, [there have been] many applications of that [including] personal components and public components. What is news? Twitter excels at that.”

Recommended Videos

So what does the company need for that to happen? More developers, says Williams. A couple years ago, Twitter rather infamously enraged the tech community by restricting its access to the company’s API. Now, Williams told Isaacson, the company has recognized this move as a mistake. “We had an API really early and we didn’t have a platform and people conflated those things and people built apps or clients for Twitter or things that were ostensibly on top of Twitter,” he said. “But it wasn’t a well-designed platform and it didn’t create a win for developers or users or the company. It was a strategic error that we had to wind down, and the company [received] a lot of critiques for that.”

Williams also gave a couple teasers as to what the company is looking for in their new CEO (Dick Costolo recently vacated the position), saying the company needs “An exceptional leader … who can make things happen.” But there may be such a thing as too many cooks in the Twitter kitchen, as the board is filled with ex-leadership, including Costolo, Williams (an ex-CEO of Twitter himself), and Jack Dorsey, the current interim CEO. Regardless of who ultimately lands the job, Williams said that it would be critical for him or her to “see the potential of the platform and … [decide] what to focus on, aligning the organization toward that purpose.”

While Williams’ conversation with Isaacson was generally candid, he did remain tight-lipped on what users and investors could expect product-wise from Twitter in the coming months. Though he confirmed that “new products and new sources of revenue coming,” he then quickly shut the conversation down, laughing, “I’ve already said too much.”

So stay true, Twitter loyalists. The tides may finally be turning in your favor.

Lulu Chang
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
Your Instagram photo dumps just got a caption for every single slide
One toggle, up to 20 captions, and finally a reason to write something for every slide.
Clothing, Hardhat, Helmet

Instagram just made one of its most popular post formats significantly more useful. 

Starting today, you can add a unique caption to every single slide in a carousel post. So, instead of one caption trying to explain up to 20 different photos, each slide gets its own text underneath. It is the kind of addition that makes me wonder why it took this long.

Read more
TikTok feeds show 3 times more AI slop than YouTube, study reveals
Kids content has the highest AI slop rate on TikTok.
TikTok

If you have ever felt like your TikTok feed is mostly fake content, you are not imagining it. A new report from Kapwing found that 59% of videos served to a brand-new TikTok account are AI slop. That is roughly three times the rate Kapwing found when it ran the same test on YouTube.

How bad is TikTok's AI slop problem compared to YouTube?

Read more
Threads makes it easier to find your community and tune out what you don’t want to see
Threads Communities are out of beta with new custom icons and a dedicated hub, and a new Your Algo tool lets you set topic preferences to customize your feed.
Threads Communities upgrades and Your Algo release featured

Threads is rolling out a batch of upgrades to its Communities feature and introducing a new feed personalization tool, as Meta marks the platform reaching 500 million monthly active users.

Communities get their own identity

Read more