A number of Twitter luminaries say they鈥檝e signed off for the last time and jumped ship to a more secure platform over concerns they no longer trust the California tech giant.
Some Thais who have relied on Twitter as a final frontier for free speech fired off their final blue birds to announce their move to a decentralized platform that uses blockchain to pay users for content.聽
Called Minds, it has surged today as a popular topic online with thousands of tweets tagged . For writer and social critic Sarinee Achavanuntakul, it was a collapse in confidence that Twitter remained a safe place for dissent.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the privacy policy that Twitter will share IP addresses to its partners. You have to understand first that Twitter is a space many Thais use to freely criticize the government,鈥 she said. 鈥淸The government] also conducts [Information Operations] there, and my name is on the target list. Such an atmosphere is not okay.鈥澛

Minds on Thursday afternoon was briefly unavailable, though it was unclear whether that was due to the influx of new Thai users. Earlier it had acknowledged the sudden migration.
鈥淲e are experiencing a MASSIVE surge of Thai citizens seeking Internet freedom. @Mindsth,鈥 Minds, ironically, .
Founder Bill Ottman said he embraced the new audience and would develop Thai language support.聽
鈥淕ood morning #mindsTH. Site performance should be stabilizing. Translations coming soon,鈥 Ottman wrote on the platform this morning. He could not immediately be reached for further comment.
Hit by users over @TwitterThailand, 鈥榰nbiased鈥 platform says it鈥檚 committed to free speech
Since it went alpha in 2015, Minds has been praised by Anonymous and criticized as another haven for the hard-right fringe of racists and other extremists. Though the project is based in Connecticut, its open-source technology is decentralized and uses Ethereum-based to put money into the hands of users and content creators rather than the platform.聽
Sarinee was just one of a handful of well-known figures to announce they were moving to Minds. She tweeted a 鈥済oodbye鈥 to Twitter this morning and announced she would mainly use Minds and Facebook from now on. While she didn鈥檛 deactivate her Twitter account, she said she had deleted the application from her smartphone. She said Minds鈥 strong password protection and end-to-end encryption appealed to her.
Other popular Twitter figures who announced that they have created a Minds account today included Wiroj Lakkana-adisorn, an MP for the disbanded Future Forward Party, writer-translator Tomorn Sookprecha and actress-TV host聽Inthira Charoenpura.
Thai army wages cyber warfare to sow social divisions: opposition lawmaker
After concerns 鈥 legit and silly 鈥 greeted Twitter鈥檚 launch of a national service last week, the breaking point for Sarinee and others came Monday after word that it would discontinue its 鈥淒o Not Track鈥 privacy setting next month.聽
Do Not Track allows users to opt out of cross-site tracking on other sites that use it 鈥 Twitter , including other major platforms such as Google and Facebook. It is with new privacy tools.聽
It also announced changes to how it shares data with third parties which, coupled with last week鈥檚 mention it had partnered with Thai government agencies, sent up red flags to online dissidents.
On Thursday, Twitter did not directly address concerns about its partnerships with 鈥済overnment departments and ministries鈥 in a statement via a publicist to 黑料社 Bangkok. It did emphasize its collaborations with 鈥渁 number of different journalistic, social activist and non-government organisations to help them with best practices to develop a more effective and engaging presence on Twitter.鈥
鈥淲e are committed to serving an open and public conversation in Thailand and will continue to be transparent in our efforts,鈥 it said.聽
A Twitter representative today said the company had nothing further to add and referred a reporter to its .
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