It's good to see them getting slapped, but I don't like the idea of dictating what can and cannot be allowed by a private entity in a private interaction- i.e. between a user and the company.
It's good to see them getting slapped, but I don't like the idea of dictating what can and cannot be allowed by a private entity in a private interaction- i.e. between a user and the company.
It's good to see them getting slapped, but I don't like the idea of dictating what can and cannot be allowed by a private entity in a private interaction- i.e. between a user and the company.
Actually it's NOT the .gov dictating what a company can do. They are merely saying that a company can't claim one thing and then do another...as like was said it's false advertising. Twitter is being treated no different then any other company is in that regard.
So they are free to keep operating the way they are, as long as they change their disclaimers/marketing to reflect it.