Twitter Blocks Animated PNGs After Trolls Use Them to Attack Epileptics
Twitter announced Monday it is blocking animated PNG (APNG) files after trolls used them to attack epileptics.
APNGs are similar to animated GIFs, containing multiple images in a single file. The images, or frames, are displayed sequentially, creating the effect of an animation or video clip.
Unlike animated GIFs, however, APNGs bypassed Twitter’s safeguards that prevent animated files from auto-playing. Online trolls took advantage of this, hijacking hashtags used by the Epilepsy Foundation and displaying flashing APNGs in an effort to cause seizures.
To prevent this from happening again, Twitter has blocked APNGs from being used. Users will still be able to upload animations, but will need to use animated GIFs, as they don’t auto-play and therefore don’t post the same risk to users.
Twitter’s announcement:
“We want everyone to have a safe experience on Twitter.
APNGs were fun, but they don’t respect autoplay settings, so we’re removing the ability to add them to Tweets. This is for the safety of people with sensitivity to motion and flashing imagery, including those with epilepsy.”
— Twitter Accessibility (@TwitterA11y) December 23, 2019
-
Twitter for Windows 10 Goes MobileOpenAI Unveils Its Web Crawler Bot and Provides Instruction on How to Block ItX CEO: We've Paid Creators Almost $20 MillionCanada Prepares to Regulate PodcastsVirtual Reality to Change MarketingSpaceX Dumps YouTube for X LivestreamsDOJ: Google Pays $10 Billion a Year to Stifle CompetitionGoogle Debunks Controversy Surrounding YouTube Ads and KidsTwitter's Answers App Analytics Available For OS XGoogle Search Advocate: Outbound Links Do Nothing for SEO
Next article:Google Finally Launches AdWords App For iOS
- ·Study: Media Companies See 42% Facebook 'Reach' Drop
- ·NYC Joins List of Jurisdictions Banning TikTok
- ·No, You Cannot Opt Out of Reddit's Personalized Ads
- ·Twitter Is Rebranding As 'X'
- ·Google Introduces Rich Card Mobile Search Results
- ·Amazon Loses Major Climate Watchdog Endorsement
- ·Google Must Pay $338.7 Million in Chromecast Patent Lawsuit
- ·Tumblr Launches Twitter
- ·LinkedIn Launches Account Targeting For Ads
- ·Google Agrees to $93 Million Settlement Over Tracking Users
- ·YouTube Ups the Ante In Its War On Ad Blockers
- ·India Cracks Down on Computer Imports
- ·Trump: I've Proved That Social Media Has More Power Than TV Ads
- ·Spotify Is Testing Podcast 'Voice Translation'
- ·FTC Warns Five Tax Prep Companies About Misusing Consumer Data
- ·Oracle Project Overrun Help Push Birmingham City Council to Bankruptcy