Twitter (X) is going to take my username @sports, any ideas how I might keep it?
I’ve been a user for 16 years, since their first day of public signups. I login every day and use twitter for hours every day. I tweet more than is shown on my account (I delete tweets often).
Here’s the message they sent me:
“Hello, The user handle associated with account @Sports will be affiliated with X Corp. Accordingly, your user handle will be changed to a new user handle.
However, we appreciate your loyalty and want to minimize any inconvenience this may cause. At this time we will be changing this handle to @sportz. We have listed additional handles that you can choose from below. Just respond to this message and we can assist you in making the change.
All data associated with your prior user handle, including followers and following data, will be transferred to your new user handle.
@allsports @sportsfan (@sportslife
Please reply to this email if you have any questions. Best regards, X”
23 comments
[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 60.8 ms ] threadThey have the ability to size it as it's not a domain or anything. So they have the legal ability to tell you to eff off.
You can try to go to court and maybe get a settlement, but talk to a lawyer first.
I rather suspect any lawyer will say "you're fucked". But it never hurts to ask.
They're showing you right where to hit 'em.
If you want to cause damage though, their insecurities are plain as day; they need user retention. That's why they reach out to butter-up long time users with new account offers and bespoke transitional options. This is your one chance to tell a human at Twitter you're done. That because of this situation you've been put in, you're going to abandon the platform entirely. Take it or leave it.
The only thing you can do now is add another dent and scuff in Elon's once perfect image, as opposed to going quietly. Maybe with enough damage, people will see him for the monster he is.
Of note is how lame their offer is. Like because they "appreciate your loyalty" they'll give you some shitty adjacent handle that nobody had claimed. Realistically just tell them to fuck off, that they should be personally disgusted with themselves, and leave.
And I know domains aren't technically permanent, but they're far less risk than ephemeral handles because you actually have some rights as a registrant.
I agree.
They're not technically permanent, but my primary domain name is one that I've had for over 30 years now (even surviving two instances of me forgetting to renew it), and the youngest of my other ones is 10 years old.
They aren't technically permanent, but they're more persistent than a lot of things people uncontroversially think of as permanent.
Anyway, as others pointed out, you can't do anything. Just tweet about it, make a fuss, and stop using Twitter.