"Sorry, you are rate limited. Please wait a few moments then try again," read an error message on Twitter when on July 1, Elon Musk, owner of the social media platform introduced—and quickly amended—a new rule of temporarily limiting posts that can be read per day by users.
What is the change?
As per the initial tweet, verified accounts were restricted to reading 6,000 posts per day, while unverified accounts were limited to 600 posts. Additionally, new unverified accounts had a limit of 300 posts per day. However, within two hours of the initial announcement, Musk tweeted that these limits would soon be increased. Verified accounts would have a new limit of 8,000 posts per day, unverified accounts would be allowed 800 posts, and new unverified accounts would have a limit of 400 posts per day. After another three hours, Musk updated the numbers again, stating that the new limits were now raised to 10,000 posts per day for verified accounts, 1,000 posts for unverified accounts, and 500 posts for new unverified accounts.
Why the limit?
The changes were made to "address extreme levels of data scraping and system manipulation," Musk tweeted. He added that the platform was getting "data pillaged", which was hindering the service for users. He added that hundreds of organisations or more were scraping Twitter data "extremely aggressively", affecting user experience.