Twitter Bug Automatically Suspends You If You Tweet the Word 'Memphis' (bleepingcomputer.com) 95
"If you want a 12 hour break from Twitter just tweet this city name and you will be immediately locked," Swift on Security tweeted today.
"A bug on Twitter is causing users to become temporarily suspended if they tweet the word 'Memphis,'" BleepingComputer has confirmed: This bug started today after users tweeting about the Tennessee city, sports teams, or players suddenly found that they were temporarily suspended for 12 hours after Tweeting the word Memphis.
Several tweets are already mocking the phenomenon...
"A bug on Twitter is causing users to become temporarily suspended if they tweet the word 'Memphis,'" BleepingComputer has confirmed: This bug started today after users tweeting about the Tennessee city, sports teams, or players suddenly found that they were temporarily suspended for 12 hours after Tweeting the word Memphis.
Several tweets are already mocking the phenomenon...
Is it such a problem to tweet "Mennefer"? (Score:4, Funny)
You think that's bad? (Score:5, Funny)
Belgium!
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Report to your nearest reeducation camp right now.
Re:You think that's bad? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Hey! This isn't a Serious Screenplay!
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If you type that, they may just send a certain brilliant-but-fussy mustachioed detective to look into your misdeeds.
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Its a Hitchhiker's Guide Reference.
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I'm sorry but if you don't get a reference to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy you have to spend no less than 2 weeks in a Geek ReEducation Camp.
Niagara Falls (Score:5, Funny)
What happens if you type Niagara Falls?
Slowly I turned, step by step...
Re: (Score:3)
Your account gets Stooged.
Sea cucumber! (Score:1)
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Memphis is the safe word.
I prefer the one from the movie Eurotrip: Fluggaenkoecchicebolsen [urbandictionary.com] :-)
Originally: FLÜGGÅNK€HIßØLÊN [urbandictionary.com] (not sure if this will render correctly...)
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Try saying that three times quickly. While wearing a ball gag.
Meme-phis (Score:1)
Meme-phis
Belgium! (Score:3)
That's what I'd tweet if I had a twitter account.
Re:Belgium! (Score:4, Insightful)
Not an accident, a test. One wrong word and you get kicked off for twelve hours, perfect for political manipulation. Any tweet that goes viral and they don't want it, they just ban the keyword twelve hours at a time and the gullible idiots hanging onto to every idiot tweet just thinks it's them.
Pay attention people, this is a twelve hour shut down to kill any viral post at any time them choose. Continue to use twitter and you truly are a gullible idiot.
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It's almost as if they're trying to 'remove' [youtu.be] a particular set of words from circulation for a period of time.
How would that work? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, it's just a bug in their automatic tools. We already know they've got automatic tools to shut down certain threads. That's nothing new. There's too much content on Twitter for them to manually mod it all.
If you don't like Twitter deciding which posts can and cannot go viral, don't use Twitter. If you want a public space on the Internet then you need the government t
Re:How would that work? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm far from a fan of the stereotyped Parler user. But Parler got taken down in what looked like a coordinated attack from their vendors. Was it collusion? I have no idea. They were morons to not expect it. But it still should have prompted an anti-trust investigation.
Still, it is a disingenuous to tell folks "build your own X", knowing tech companies will kneecap that competition if it becomes remotely viable. But I suppose that is the point.
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But Parler got taken down in what looked like a coordinated attack from their vendors.
You mean the one where they violated the ToS for months, were warned repeatedly and finally had the vendor pull out? And how the main thing stopping them getting back up with any kind of speed was wild incompetence on the tech side.?
Still, it is a disingenuous to tell folks "build your own X",
Except it isn't. Parler is back up.
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Parler got taken down in what looked like a coordinated attack from their vendors.
Only in the same way that toilet paper got taken down in a "coordinated" way last year. Sometimes everyone gets the same idea at the same time for obvious reasons. Nobody wanted to touch Parler anymore.
The politicians are trying to seize control (Score:2)
You're not going to get free speech out of them. What you're going to get is a DMCA style law that requires immediate takedown of any speech anyone who can afford a lawyer doesn't like. Big players and rich guys will be able to shut you down, but cat videos will be protected.
Re:How would that work? (Score:5, Insightful)
>"You think people wouldn't quickly spread that tweeting on certain topics gets you a 12 hour suspension... like they just did? "
No, because when it isn't buggy, it is probably done much more subtlety. I have seen credible reports from LOTS of people being shut down on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other platforms, doing nothing wrong, nothing illegal, breaking no rules, and with no explanations given. Just "poof", you are silenced because we don't like what you say.
>"If you want a public space on the Internet then you need the government to build it"
The same government that wants a "deeper relationship with big business" in the article following this one on Slashdot. The same one buying information from corporations to avert laws against collecting such information, directly. Chronism is quite alive and well.
>"Free market cuts both ways."
The free market does work very well, most of the time, when it isn't being manipulated by powerful elite, government, and mega monopolistic corporations gone power-hungy. It really is quite a jam.
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When was this? When in the history of the industrial age were monopolistic corporations not the power-hungry and superpowerful? Well, at least in any capitalistic society.
Re:How would that work? (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly. And communism works very well, when people aren't being selfish bastards.
To me, your comment sounds like further proof that those who believe in the "free market" are part of a cult. No amount of evidence will ever make them rethink their position. Just like communists or religious people.
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To me, your comment sounds like further proof that those who believe in the "free market" are part of a cult.
Fascinating. You equate the most logical method of economics with religious thinking. Of course, you do not provide a logical alternative that works better, you merely attack. The implication is that you are very much against the free market and that you wish to impose one of the antiquated and centrally controlled methods instead.
Which method do you want to go back to and who would control it? A central committee? A benevolent dictator? I am absolutely certain that it would benefit the average person far m
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The free market does work very well, most of the time, when it isn't being manipulated by powerful elite, government, and mega monopolistic corporations gone power-hungy.
So, never.
Someone is ALWAYS manipulating the market. ALWAYS. You hope that it is being manipulated by government for good reasons (like stability) but it is often manipulated by government for bad reasons, too... because governments are often manipulated for bad reasons. Today, they are usually manipulated by... corporations.
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seen credible reports from LOTS of people
In other words, you don't know any of them personally.
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>"In other words, you don't know any of them personally."
Personally, no. But many were cross-verified.
Subtly? From Twitter & FB? (Score:3)
So let me get this straight, you don't want government involved so you're going to have government force Twitter to do what you want?
What do you think is going to happen when you create a weak government that is supposed to only ever do what you want personally while allowing unlimited money (read: power) to a handful of people at the top?
Look, you've got 2 choices in life. If you don't have a powerful central government then people with money will build one.
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>"So let me get this straight, you don't want government involved so you're going to have government force Twitter to do what you want?"
You don't have to have a huge government that is meddling in everything in order to enforce some basic anti-trust. But we aren't even doing that. So we have the worst of all worlds- huge, wasteful, meddling government *and* not controlling actual and near-monopolies *and* not preventing chronism.
>"The market isn't free, never has been, never can be. You either regu
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And if you don't want to do all that, make your own website.
With blackjack! And hookers!
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"Hi, I have no idea what network effects are, so I think it's reasonable to expect anyone at all to compete with an established social network, even though billionaires would have trouble doing it."
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has there ever been a time when "that's on you" was used in an intellectually honest context
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Oh yes. Let the GOVERNMENT build it for us. That'll be great. No censorship there. Meanwhile I'll just be harassed for magically violating ToS until I go out of business if I try to build an "alternative" Twitter for all the "bad posters", never mind that Facebook and Twitter routinely do 100x worse without being troubled by anyone.
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There wouldn't be censorship on any American government sites because they would have to follow the law and the Constitution. Posters would still be held accountable for what they posted so they wouldn't be allowed to post the equivalent of shouting "Fire," in a crowded theatre ( for example, "There's a bomb going to go off in five minutes in city hall!").
A government site probably wouldn't happen because there are many lobbyists all over America, at all levels of government, trying to prevent governments f
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And if the law is designed to censor people? See equal time doctrine.
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Farcebook and the Twits host their own web sites, no one is going to be booting them off their own platform. Parler's admins were just too incompetent (and probably too cheap) to host their own site.
Re: Belgium! (Score:1)
Continue to use twitter and you truly are a gullible idiot.
Company builds business on backs of gullible idiots. Gullible idiots play hoof arted about enabling the whole thing.
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It's the anti-doxing system having a moment.
Twitter understandably wants a system that can block people from posting personal info once it has been reported to them. Presumably someone in Memphis was targeted but they screwed up the detection that should have included their entire address.
I imagine they have something similar for known illegal images.
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Poor Bob Dylan (Score:1)
Better not say "Mobile" either! Or "stuck", or "inside", or "blues"...
Whole Plugged (Score:2)
Its not a bug (Score:2)
Zuckerbergs pw (Score:3)
They canceled Memphis (Score:2)
Who's next`:-)
Censorship (Score:5, Insightful)
Dang, that's some censorship right there. A word list that immediately suspends your account for 12 hours (for starters). Isn't it enough to simply tell you that your tweet violates their rules? I guess they figure a person may try to subvert it. Like I can subvert Slashdot's N A Z I lameness filter easily enough.
Memphis is not a word (Score:2)
Go there. If your ears are working correctly, you'll note that the city is called 'Maulfus' (the 'u' is partly silent). If you wish to learn how to say the word, it's best to begin with a mouthful of mashed potatoes. You'll learn to love it. I wonder how Twitter came to understand that.
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Go there. If your ears are working correctly, you'll note that the city is called 'Maulfus' (the 'u' is partly silent). If you wish to learn how to say the word, it's best to begin with a mouthful of mashed potatoes. You'll learn to love it. I wonder how Twitter came to understand that.
Are you referring to the Memphis in Egypt, or perhaps one of the eleven cities named Memphis located in the US? You seem quite certain about it.
Bug acknowledged and fixed (Score:2)
Re:Bug acknowledged and fixed (Score:5, Informative)
>"@TwitterSupport has acknowledged and fixed the bug [twitter.com]."
Translation:
"Nothing to see here. We made a mistake in our censorship algorithms, it was supposed to ban only certain people we don't like using the word in certain political and social contexts. The corrected code will now do this more effectively, quietly, with better targeting, and behind the scenes, so you can continue to think that Twitter is an open platform. We are sorry you had to see that, it was our intent to keep all our manipulation of your communication secret."
Re:Bug acknowledged and fixed (Score:5, Informative)
it was our intent to keep all our manipulation of your communication secret
Jokes aside your comment makes zero sense. This wasn't a shadow ban, and twitter doesn't even try to hide that it uses algorithmic censorship. They flat out told the world they implemented it.
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>"Jokes aside your comment makes zero sense. This wasn't a shadow ban, and twitter doesn't even try to hide that it uses algorithmic censorship. They flat out told the world they implemented it."
The fact they are banning and censoring isn't a secret. Their motivation and agenda is, since the actions don't match the stated rules.
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What rules? The rules are: "You're a guest in my house, if I don't like you I'll show you the door".
You think that's bad? (Score:2)
Try typing "Memphis did nothing wrong".
Soon thereafter... (Score:1)
Burma (Score:2)
I panicked
The Chinese would be proud. (Score:1)
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one of the most brutally authoritarian regimes on the planet
Really? Why aren't they a US ally like Saudi Arabia or Honduras then?
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Re: I long for the good old days (Score:2)
Memphis Depay? (Score:3, Interesting)
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I don't have a Twitter account, but this theory of yours is trivially easy to test: Try tweeting about Depay rather than Memphis. If the result is the same, your theory is correct. If not, you are talking out of your ass.
Let us know the results... assuming you are willing to actually test your hypothesis.
Bite my shiny metal ass (Score:2)
What could we say to really blow up Twitter? Please. Thanks. Sorry. Funderful. Non-alcoholic. Compassion. Shrimp-Toast.
Antiquing
And the worst thing: (Score:2)
People can't even tweet about it!
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People can't even tweet about it!
That would explain why Elvis has been so quiet recently.
What were they censoring? (Score:2)
What's going on with Memphis that we ought to know about? If Twitter is banning something, the oligarchs are probably up to no good.
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Are we forgetting ... (Score:2)
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Please, American did everything first. Hasn't Hollywood taught us that yet? Obviously the existence of the Egyptian city of Memphis is proof that time travel capable of going back into the past will be (or has been already) by the US and they have gone back in history to important times when famous cities were founded. Then, and I mean when these Chrononauts (time travellers) are in the past, manage to get the cities named after (or before?) the American cities.
WHY (Score:2)
The most likely reason (Score:2)