Susbtack Releases its New Feature ‘Notes’ that Resembles Twitter - Visualistan -->

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Since Thursday, Twitter was reported to be restricting access to tweets containing Substack links and marking them as “potentially spammy or unsafe.” Noting that these tweets were clearly safe, it was speculated that Twitter was acting out of vengeance against Susbtack for a new Twitter-like feature that the company was going to release. After all, Musk had clarified back in December that Twitter would not tolerate “relentless free advertising” from competitors on its platform.  

 

 

The feature, called ‘Notes’ had been in testing with a limited number of writers for some weeks and has now been announced to roll out in a separate tab on Substack. It is meant to help users share shorter posts like posts, quotes, comments, images, GIFs, and links. Unlike Twitter, it has no character limit. Up to six photos and GIFs can be shared within Notes. Moreover, users can engage with other Notes using the Like, Reply, and Restack buttons. The Restack option is basically Substack’s version of Retweet.

 


The Notes tab is further divided into two sub feeds: “Home” and “Subscribed.” Within Home, users can view and interact with Notes from people they have subscribed to, as well as recommended accounts. The Subscribed feed consists of Notes specifically from those that users have subscribed to.

 

While Twitter has now decided to remove restrictions from tweets containing Substack posts, search results for “Substack” on Twitter still shows a search for “newsletter” instead. Maybe if more writers turn to Substack to interact with certain writers, we would see Substack gaining more popularity. For now, Substack just wishes to peacefully coexist with Twitter, though.

Susbtack Releases its New Feature ‘Notes’ that Resembles Twitter


Since Thursday, Twitter was reported to be restricting access to tweets containing Substack links and marking them as “potentially spammy or unsafe.” Noting that these tweets were clearly safe, it was speculated that Twitter was acting out of vengeance against Susbtack for a new Twitter-like feature that the company was going to release. After all, Musk had clarified back in December that Twitter would not tolerate “relentless free advertising” from competitors on its platform.  

 

 

The feature, called ‘Notes’ had been in testing with a limited number of writers for some weeks and has now been announced to roll out in a separate tab on Substack. It is meant to help users share shorter posts like posts, quotes, comments, images, GIFs, and links. Unlike Twitter, it has no character limit. Up to six photos and GIFs can be shared within Notes. Moreover, users can engage with other Notes using the Like, Reply, and Restack buttons. The Restack option is basically Substack’s version of Retweet.

 


The Notes tab is further divided into two sub feeds: “Home” and “Subscribed.” Within Home, users can view and interact with Notes from people they have subscribed to, as well as recommended accounts. The Subscribed feed consists of Notes specifically from those that users have subscribed to.

 

While Twitter has now decided to remove restrictions from tweets containing Substack posts, search results for “Substack” on Twitter still shows a search for “newsletter” instead. Maybe if more writers turn to Substack to interact with certain writers, we would see Substack gaining more popularity. For now, Substack just wishes to peacefully coexist with Twitter, though.

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