SOCIAL
Instagram Announces Tighter Rate Limits on Threads to Combat Spam Attacks
Elon and Co. will love this.
Amid rising issues with data scraping, as generative AI projects look for inputs to feed into their systems, and scammers seek out new vulnerabilities in apps, Instagram chief Adam Mosseri has announced that they’ll be introducing tighter rate limits on Threads, its new Twitter-like app.
As outlined by Mosseri, Meta’s implementing rate limits to protect users from spam attacks in the new app, but it may also be related to data scraping, which was the key motivator for Twitter introducing its own rate limits recently, which have been widely criticized by Twitter users and tech analysts alike.
Twitter’s rate limits left many people locked out of the app, after reaching a certain amount of viewed tweets. Twitter owner Elon Musk explained that the move was necessary ‘to address extreme levels of data scraping and system manipulation’, while also pointing to generative AI projects as the key cause, which could potentially have overloaded Twitter’s servers.
This will be unlocked shortly. Per my earlier post, drastic & immediate action was necessary due to EXTREME levels of data scraping.
Almost every company doing AI, from startups to some of the biggest corporations on Earth, was scraping vast amounts of data.
It is rather…
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 1, 2023
Twitter has since increased its rate limits, with paying subscribers able to view more content than non-Twitter Blue members – but the whole situation had been framed as another example of Elon Musk’s failure in managing the app, and misunderstanding the social media ecosystem.
And now, Meta’s doing the same.
And as you would expect, Elon has responded in his usual restrained way:
It’s difficult to know what the impacts of these new rate limits will be on Threads users, and how many people will be affected by the restrictions. But as Mosseri notes, those who think that they’ve been rate limited unfairly can contact Instagram to address the situation.
It’s not ideal, but it’s seemingly a necessary step, as it may well be on Twitter too, in order to stop third parties from manipulating social media systems, and taking data without permission.
And without an API, there’s no other way to gain Threads data other than through scraping.
A new consideration in the age of generative AI development.