Twitter Restores Free API Access For Public Services
Twitter restore free access to its application programming interface for verified government and publicly-owned services that tweet "critical purposes".
Twitter shut off its free API, an infrastructure tool that allows for multiple computer programs to work together, earlier last month breaking a lot of apps and websites that relied on the social network’s free developer tools. The social website has however decided to restore free access to its application programming interface for verified government and publicly-owned services that tweet “critical purposes” such as weather alerts, transport updates, and emergency notifications.
“One of the most important use cases for the Twitter API has always been public utility,” said Twitter’s official account @TwitterDev in a tweet. “Verified gov or publicly owned services who tweet weather alerts, transport updates, and emergency notifications may use the API, for these critical purposes, for free.”
The shutoff of Twitter’s free API resulted in hundreds of indie developers shutting down their Twitter-based apps due to the new pricing which forced emergency weather alert accounts and public transit alert accounts to also announce they would no longer be able to provide real-time service alerts on Twitter. At the time, Elon Musk claimed the new API pricing was being implemented to kill off the bots.
“Yeah, free API is being abused badly right now by bot scammers & opinion manipulators. There’s no verification process or cost, so easy to spin up 100k bots to do bad things.” Musk tweeted. “Just ~$100/month for API access with ID verification will clean things up greatly.” Read More…