You will soon be able to send much longer direct messages on Twitter.
The site plans to remove the 140-character limit on its direct messaging feature in July, the company revealed in a post on its developer forum on Thursday.
The site plans to remove the 140-character limit on its direct messaging feature in July, the company revealed in a post on its developer forum on Thursday.
The character limit for regular tweets, which is also 140, will remain in place.
"You may be wondering what this means for the public side of Twitter," Sachin Agarwal, Twitter's product manager for direct messages, wrote in the post on Thursday. "Nothing! Tweets will continue to be the 140 characters they are today."
Announcement: Removing the 140 character limit from Direct Messages.
— TwitterDev (@TwitterDev) June 11, 2015
The move is the latest in a series of major changes the company has made to direct messages over the past year. Twitter introduced group messaging features into the service in January. The network also added an option that allows users to opt-in to receive private messages from anyone else on the service.
Previously, only users who followed one another could exchange direct messages. People can opt-in to receiving direct messages from anyone through "security and privacy" menu in the app's main settings.
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