General

Twitter working on rules, replay option for Spaces

Author : NewsGram Desk

According to 9To5Mac, these new features are still under development and were discovered in Twitter's code by developer and app researcher Nima Owji. More specifically, the code indicates that Twitter is adding four new options to Spaces that should give hosts more control over the room.

According to Owji's findings, the company wants to provide "rules" for Spaces users, the report said. For now the rules are unclear but this will probably include a section for hosts to define what can and cannot be said on Spaces. There will also be a new option to "block" Spaces, which may indicate that Twitter will let users restrict a live conversation to a specific group of people. However, what's even more interesting are the codes about a "replay" option for Spaces, the report added.

At present, the only way to join Spaces is when the conversation is live. After Spaces is over, users cannot listen to it again, it said. Now it seems that Twitter wants to change that, but most likely the "replay" will become an optional feature. When enabled, users will also be able to see the duration and which people participated in that chat.

As per the report, since these are only findings from Twitter's code, it's unknown when these features will be rolled out to the public. Earlier in August, Twitter introduced the option to add a co-host to Spaces, as well as including its live audio platform in Twitter's official API for third-party clients.

Keywords: twitter, new features, technology

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp

Download our app on Play Store

Trump and Lula at the White House: a Relationship Built on Pragmatism and a Broader Regional Calculus

From Blooms to Bytes: Will Kenya’s Data Center Boom Repeat the ‘Greenhouse Effect’?

Hantavirus, COVID, Norovirus, Legionnaires’: Why are Cruise Ships so Prone to Disease Outbreaks?

DDMA Issues Eviction Notices to 310 Families in Yamuna Bazar, 15 Days to Vacate Floodplains

How Electricity First Shocked and Fascinated India: The Story of the Country’s Earliest Light Bulbs