If you thought the problem with Twitter is that there's not enough self-promotion and logrolling, then you are in luck: On Thursday, the company introduced a new feature called "Tip Jar," which allows users to send money directly to other users (though it is currently it's limited to a small number of Twitter-anointed "creators, journalists, experts, and nonprofits" who write in English). This is both a look back to the Tip Jars that were scattered among blogs in the 2000s and a look forward to so-called Web3, which foretells an internet on which all content circulation is intrinsically monetized.
Writing tips
Writing tips
Writing tips
If you thought the problem with Twitter is that there's not enough self-promotion and logrolling, then you are in luck: On Thursday, the company introduced a new feature called "Tip Jar," which allows users to send money directly to other users (though it is currently it's limited to a small number of Twitter-anointed "creators, journalists, experts, and nonprofits" who write in English). This is both a look back to the Tip Jars that were scattered among blogs in the 2000s and a look forward to so-called Web3, which foretells an internet on which all content circulation is intrinsically monetized.