Earlier this week, Twitter began moving users to a “new” version of TweetDeck after a decision to limit the number of tweets people could see temporarily broke the previous iteration of its list aggregator. Had given. For many, this change was a downgrade as the new version was missing some of the features found in its predecessor. If you’d like to use an earlier release of TweetDeck, you can do so now, but almost certainly only for a limited time.
as noted ledgeOvernight, some Twitter users noticed that the old TweetDeck was back without an official announcement from Elon Musk, Twitter CEO Linda Yacarino, or any of the company’s official social accounts. Additionally, a handful of developers, including Harpy creator Roberto Doering, noticed that Twitter’s legacy API was working again, allowing their third-party clients to work once again. Again, how long this will hold true is hard to say.
“Please note that this does not mean that Harpy will be maintained again, given that Twitter will soon be shutting down access to its legacy APIs (again) and that third-party apps are still subject to their (Terms of Service) ),” Doering wrote on Harpy’s GitHub page. When Twitter began forcing users to migrate to the new TweetDeck, the company said users would need to be verified in order to continue using the tool, meaning most people would have to if they wanted continued access. Will need to subscribe to Twitter Blue.











