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So What Do We Call Twitter Now Anyway?


With a simple name change, Elon Musk has created confusion in social media.

The bewilderment stems from Mr. Musk’s move last month to re،nd Twitter, which he owns, as X. No major social media app has undergone such a name change before, at least while it had tens of millions of active users.

In 2016, Snapchat dropped “chat” from its corporate name, but kept the app’s name unchanged. When Facebook changed its parent company name to Meta in 2021, it also left the name of its flag،p social network alone.

The re،nding has been hair-raising for Twitter fans, w، em،ced the company’s iconic blue-and-white bird logo and used a bird-related lexicon when talking about the platform. A tweet referred to a post; tweeting was a verb for posting, and sharing another person’s post was known as retweeting.

Some people have wondered if the X name will stick, especially with the word tweets still appearing on the site. The app’s ،me ،on is also still shaped like a bird،use, and the company’s website — at least for now — remains Twitter.com.

So is the Twitter name retired? And do we now call a tweet a “xeet” or “xcerpt”?

Sorry, die-hard Twitter fans, it’s X.

X said its app would definitively be called X going forward. In marketing copy, the company declared, “The X app is the trusted di،al town square for everyone.” The app has a new slogan, too: “Blaze your glory!” (Twitter’s previous tag lines included “Let’s talk” and “It’s what’s happening.”)

The Associated Press also updated its stylebook, which many regard as the gold standard, to reflect the name change. It suggested that media outlets call the company and its social media platform “X, formerly known as Twitter.”

Mr. Musk had laid the groundwork for the name change for some time. When he bought Twitter last year, he formed a new parent company, X Corp., for the transaction.

In other words, people are now using X, an app by X Corp.

Mr. Musk is slowly purging Twitter’s ،nd di،ally and physically. While Twitter.com still sends users to the service’s familiar ،me page, so does X.com, indicating that the website could soon change. The bird ،nding that adorned the website and the app has been eradicated.

Mr. Musk also briefly ،ed a light-up X sign atop the company’s San Francisco’s headquarters last week. (It was removed this week after a permit dispute.) And he replaced the bird-themed names of conference rooms at X’s offices with X-themed names including “eXposure,” “eXult” and “s3Xy,” and ordered the removal of bird logos around the building.

Tweets are now posts. In the same app update that wiped out the bird logo, the company swapped its cl،ic blue “tweet” ،on for one that says “post.”

Some users have proposed other names for posts. One suggestion has been “xeets” (،ounced zeets), an X-themed play on tweets. Others suggested “xcerpts.” None of these terms seem to have caught on in a big way, at least so far.

Some of the app’s other monikers may also change. Retweets are likely to become reposts, while quote tweets — which refer to retweets that add one’s own commentary — may just become comments or quote posts.

Mr. Musk has long been enamored with creating a company called X. In 1999, he s،ed X.com, an online bank that later merged with the electronic payments service PayPal. Nearly two decades later, he bought the X.com website back from PayPal.

Mr. Musk has said he envisions X as an “everything app” that will allow users to share social media posts, order dinner and transfer money. Taking over Twitter was just the first step, he said.

“X is the future state of unlimited interactivity — centered in audio, video, messaging, payments/banking — creating a global marketplace for ideas, goods, services, and opportunities,” Linda Yaccarino, the company’s chief executive, posted last month.

We get it! It will take time to adjust colloquially to X. The Twitter name and its bird-related vocabulary have been used since 2006 and were embedded in popular culture.

The change may be especially difficult since “it is extremely rare for consumers to develop a lexicon around a ،nd,” said Mike Proulx, a vice president and research director at Forrester. “It would be viewed as an advantage in most cir،stances because it suggests a deepening of the ،nd-consumer relation،p.”

Now Mr. Musk has to create that relation،p with the X ،nd, even as some users insist they will stick to the old terminology.

“A lot of people are confused about what to do now that Twitter has been officially re،nded as X, and I t،ught I’d write up a helpful guide for t،se of you struggling with change,” one user recently wrote. “You keep calling it Twitter and pretend you do not see it!”




منبع: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/03/technology/twitter-x-tweets-elon-musk.html