Social Media

Who Asked Twitter For 9,860 More Characters?

Twitter might cap tweets at 10,000 characters instead of the traditional 140, according to Re/code.

Who Asked Twitter For 9,860 More Characters?
Getty Images / Bethany Clarke

Seriously: Who asked Twitter for more characters? 

If a recent Re/code report is any indication, that's what could be coming down the pipeline: a feature allowing users to tweet up to 10,000 characters, just like Twitter's Direct Messages. But why? (Video via Twitter)

Many outlets report this just is another attempt for Twitter to improve on user growth, which has been a big focus for the company. Moments was another feature aimed at getting more people on Twitter.

But according to some Twitter users, the change would be a 10,000-character step in the wrong direction: It would make Twitter less likable for those who actually use the service.

After all, this is what 10,000 characters would look like. Not so cool, right?

Twitter users might already know there are third-party applications — like TwitLonger — that let users post longer tweets.

Twitter's been beholden to the 140-character limit because of short message service, or SMS, limitations. SMS is one a way to post tweets from a mobile device, and the worldwide standard for SMS is 160 characters.

According to Re/code, tweets will look the same with the new feature. Clicking on the longer tweets will reveal the other 9,860 characters. The outlet cites sources who say the new feature could be released by the end of the first quarter.

Twitter hasn't commented on the rumored extra characters. 

This video includes images from Getty Images.