Dan Robinson
EF5
Twitter/X added a posting option some time ago that makes content theft for profit an officially-supported function of the platform. This function allows accounts to repost (embed) videos from other accounts as *native* reposts that are indistinguishable from a traditional download/native reupload.
The most shocking and egregious part of this function is that the revenue earned on a video reposted this way *all* goes to the reposting account, with *zero* shared with the original poster.
This was confirmed in the following:
Furthermore, the engagement on the repost (views, retweets, replies) all goes to the reposting account, meaning the original account gets none of the engagement metrics that are used to qualify for monetization.
This goes far beyond the worst TOS rights grabs any platform has ever tried to institute, yet has quietly been enacted without the user base’s knowledge.
The most shocking and egregious part of this function is that the revenue earned on a video reposted this way *all* goes to the reposting account, with *zero* shared with the original poster.
This was confirmed in the following:
Furthermore, the engagement on the repost (views, retweets, replies) all goes to the reposting account, meaning the original account gets none of the engagement metrics that are used to qualify for monetization.
This goes far beyond the worst TOS rights grabs any platform has ever tried to institute, yet has quietly been enacted without the user base’s knowledge.