Twitter DMs Can Now Be 10,000 Characters, So Ramble On
Date: 2025-05-19 15:03:14Source: FocusViews (143)
Twitter has officially dropped the 140-character limit …
On Direct Messages. Now, you can ramble to your heart’s desire when sending private messages to another Twitter user. Twitter said it would be doing this a couple of months ago, and today the update is rolling out to iOS, Android, Tweetdeck, and twitter.com.
The new limit is 10,000 characters, which isn’t really as many as you think (Facebook Messenger’s limit is double that), but it’s probably sufficient in most cases.
“While Twitter is largely a public experience, Direct Messages let you have private conversations about the memes, news, movements, and events that unfold on Twitter. Each of the hundreds of millions of Tweets sent across Twitter every day is an opportunity for you to spark a conversation about what’s happening in your world. That’s why we’ve made a number of changes to Direct Messages over the last few months. Today’s change is another big step towards making the private side of Twitter even more powerful and fun.”
Direct Messages now go beyond 140 characters. Go long, express yourself, wax poetic: https://t.co/zr2lnTfOI7 pic.twitter.com/o4eSv6Wv5u
— Twitter (@twitter) August 12, 2015
Honestly, character limits for DMs was always kind of ridiculous. Limits on public tweets? Sure, that’s what Twitter is. Changing that would change the core of the service.
But limiting direct messages was dumb. If Twitter wants people to use it as a true messaging app (which it clearly does), this had to happen.
Previous Article: Tumblr Updates iOS App With GIF Button
Next Article: Facebook Messenger Gets Message Requests
You May Like
- Google AdWords Manager Accounts Get New Features
- 4 Reasons ADA Compliance is Important for Ecommerce Stores
- New Bipartisan Bill Would Target Social Media Addiction
- Google Search Console Now Has Page Experience For Desktop
- Google Makes Cloud Dataflow, Cloud Pub/Sub Generally Available
- How to Master the Art of Industrial Marketing
- Google Analytics Is Illegal in Austria, Violates the GDPR
- Google Under Closer Scrutiny From German Antitrust Watchdog
- Google Announces Email Address Targeting With 'Customer Match'