> X in a Monday court filing argued that its users don't own their accounts and those accounts can't be sold or transferred to a third party without X's permission.
There you go. It's not your account, it's his account, he lets you use it. Always was, always will be: Private property, used under licence.
> X in a Monday court filing argued that its users don't own their accounts and those accounts can't be sold or transferred to a third party without X's permission.
There you go. It's not your account, it's his account, he lets you use it. Always was, always will be: Private property, used under licence.
It's a reminder that social network providers are another global namespace, without any property rights to your own name.
When it's time to distract people a bit more, expect these accounts to spew stuff.