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November 23rd , 2024

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Nartey Isaac

A month ago

WHY I’M STILL CALLING X, TWITTER—AND WHY TWITTER HAS A “CORN” PROBLEM

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Why I’m Still Calling X, Twitter—And Why Twitter Has a “Corn” Problem


Picture this: It’s late at night, and you’re casually scrolling through your feed, sipping your coffee. You see a string of hilarious memes, a few heated debates about the latest superhero movie, and then—BAM! Your thumb freezes mid-scroll, your eyes widen. An explicit image flashes on your screen out of nowhere. Your coffee cup shakes a little. You quickly flick your thumb upward, hoping no one else saw that.

Welcome to Twitter—or should I say X? Nah, let's be real, it’s still Twitter to all of us.

You can change the name, slap a shiny new logo on it, but that strange little moment? The one where you're caught off guard, feeling like you accidentally opened the wrong door in a room full of innocent memes? That’s not going anywhere anytime soon. And we’ve all been there—stumbling into content that you didn’t sign up for. Or, in this case, "corn" that pops up like an unexpected guest at your party. (And no, I don’t mean the popcorn kind.)

The New Name, Same Wild Ride

The rebranding to X promised a sleek, futuristic transformation. Maybe you even imagined an orderly space, where tech meets elegance, and conversations flow like fine wine. But when you walk into this "X" zone, you quickly realize something hasn’t changed. There's still that unpredictable, anything-goes vibe, like walking into a house party and discovering someone brought fireworks indoors.

Twitter's always had this chaotic energy. You know, the kind that makes you chuckle at one tweet and then gasp at the next. But lurking just below the surface, hidden between the jokes and viral trends, is the stuff you didn’t ask for—explicit posts that sneak up on you, making your heart skip a beat (and not in a good way).


The Cornfield You Didn’t Sign Up For

As you continue scrolling, your phone screen feels like it’s constantly toeing the line between fun and...awkward. One minute you're catching up on your favorite celebrity’s latest hot take, the next, something very inappropriate slides into view. You raise an eyebrow, wondering how it’s even allowed to exist so casually on your timeline, like a wild tumbleweed rolling through an otherwise quiet desert town.

That tumbleweed? Yeah, that’s the "corn" problem. Twitter’s been wrestling with this for ages. Despite updates, promises, and now a complete name change, the platform still feels like it’s riding a bucking bronco, refusing to completely reign in all the inappropriate content. The wild west of social media, where anything can pop up at any time.

A Platform Torn Between Free Speech and Filtering

And then there’s that moment when you realize why Twitter’s always been this way. Unlike Instagram, with its perfectly curated, censored feeds, Twitter’s motto has always been about freedom—freedom of speech, freedom to share thoughts, and well, freedom to post...everything. It’s like stepping into a no-filter zone where anything goes. A little thrilling? Sure. A bit risky? Absolutely.

And sure, maybe they could tighten things up. Maybe turn the dial down a notch or two on the explicit content, but there’s this unspoken truth hanging in the air: that explicit stuff? It brings views. Views bring engagement. And engagement? That brings dollars.

You can almost hear the gears of the platform turning, weighing freedom of expression against the risk of alienating users with too much moderation. After all, some people are here for the chaos. And that's the messy balance Twitter—or X—has been trying to strike.


So, What's the Fix?

 Twitter, it seems, has laid out some basic paths—turn on your sensitive content filter, report accounts—but the field is still vast, and it's easy to stumble upon an unwelcome scene.

Will Twitter (X, sigh) ever clear the field completely? You wonder as you cautiously continue your scroll, knowing that while you can avoid some traps, others are just a little too deeply rooted.



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Nartey Isaac

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