Note: An account that you have blocked will still be visible to you in the list of people in the conversation, indicating they are blocked, but without their profile information displayed. You may choose to unblock them from this list by tapping on the blocked icon

*Note: For some people who create a new account on X, your account settings may already be set to receive message requests from other people you don't follow. These requests are kept separate from your other DMs until you accept them. You can accept the request to continue the conversation. To disable message requests, go to your Settings.


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Navigate to your DMs and tap or click on the search bar. From there, type in keywords and names of the conversations you're looking for and messages, groups, and people with those keywords or names will populate. To go directly to the message, tap or click on the search result.

You can receive messages from anyone if you check the box next to Allow Messages requests from everyone in your Privacy and safety settings on twitter.com. You can also adjust this setting via the X for iOS or X for Android apps. If you enable this option, anyone can message you and add you to group conversations.

Note: Disabling the Receive messages from anyone setting will not prevent you from continuing to receive Direct Messages from someone you don't follow if you have a prior conversation already established with that person. You will need to either report the conversation or block the account to stop receiving Direct Messages from that person.

Deleting the message will remove it from your inbox. Note: Deleting a message will not prevent that account from sending you messages in the future. You will always have the option to block the account or report the conversation. Blocked accounts cannot send you messages, unless you unblock them.

Additionally, by default, we filter lower-quality requests from the Requests section of your inbox for the X for iOS and Android app. When enabled, the quality filter for message requests hides conversation requests we think may be lower quality. You will not receive notifications for filtered requests, but these messages will still be viewable behind the low quality filter that exists at the bottom of the Requests section of your inbox.

I am working on a project where the conversation of a twitter user needs to be retrieved. For example i want to get all the replies of this tweet of BBC World Service. Using the REST API v1.1 i can get the timeline (tweet, re-tweet) of a twitter user. But i did not find any documentation/working work around on fetching replies of a specific tweet. Is there any work around on getting the replies of a specific tweet at all?

Replies to a given Tweet, as well as replies to those replies, are all included in the conversation stemming from the single original Tweet. Regardless of how many reply threads result, they will all share a common conversation_id to the original Tweet that sparked the conversation. Using the Twitter API v2, you have the ability to retrieve and reconstruct an entire conversation thread, so that you can better understand what is being said, and how conversations and ideas evolve.

Twitter is the platform for public conversation. Ideally, publishers will know when that conversation includes them, understand what is being said, and use that knowledge to inform their content strategy. That's where Conversation Insights, our second Publisher Insight tool, comes into play.


Conversation Insights finds and displays Tweets that you might ordinarily miss, thanks to our content listening tools that go beyond mentions and hashtags. The dashboard is customizable, allowing you to discover what people are saying about you minute by minute over time. You can use this knowledge to join and even mold the conversation with timely and relevant content.

Last month, long before the recent Twitter hack, I had the chance to talk to Parag Agrawal, CTO of Twitter, about what the social network is doing to foster productive conversation as part of the Collision From Home conference. We discussed how to burst filter bubbles, how to identify a bot, and what, exactly, makes a good tweet.

NT You said about 13 interesting things, but I want to start with two words you said a little bit ago, which is "improves health," which seems a little bit like a proxy for good. Right? I mean, there must be things about conversations that you consider healthy, actions that people take on the platform that you consider healthy. Right? For example, if I see a tweet and you know that it makes me more likely to return to Twitter three days later, then probably it is a good and healthy tweet. What else do you mean by improves health?

PA Improvement of health... When we talk about the word health, we talk about health of the public conversation. We think of a healthy public conversation as one that has various points of use, that is civil, that helps people be more and better informed, that helps people learn from the platform, want to use it more, want to engage with others more in constructive conversation. Those are all the high level of thinking about health. When we build features, we think about the problem that we're trying to solve. We think about, if we solve this problem well, what would we observe in terms of user reaction, user behavior, to know that we appropriately solved the problem? And then we'd have some confidence that we improved. Let me take an example to make this concrete. Let's think of the conversation page, where you click into a tweet and you see a bunch of replies underneath it. We currently prioritize what order you see those tweets in. We divide up these groups into a few different sections where you have to click in to see more and then you have to click in to see potentially offensive tweets. Now, a measure when we improve our models or improve our ranking of this area, what we want to see is people reporting fewer tweets in areas that we determined to be high quality, people blocking fewer people as a result of those tweets, and people wanting to engage with more of the tweets that we prioritize for them. If as a result of a ranking change we observe in line with our expectations, we believe we have improved the health of that conversation.

PA And they're the ones that inflict the most harm. So an interesting category of that is sort of backed manipulation attempts. So we see a pattern where we find over time these fairly sophisticated campaigns to manipulate the conversation and are able to attribute them to some state as being sort of the primary force behind them. When we do identify them we make a public disclosure. We actually release the entire data set, often many terabytes. So that external researchers can look into that, learn more about patterns that we might not have even seen and make us smarter going forward to be able to predict them better.

PA There's a lot of value in doing it both to society and to public conversation, which is our mission. There's also value for us as people to get informed about diverse perspectives. In terms of how we think about doing it, we think about doing it through product services like explore that allows you to go broader. But we also... that's sort of a motivator for us, sort of moving in the direction of following topics, instead of just following people. By following topics you're choosing and able to get a diverse set of perspectives related to that topic instead of just your set of voices that you chose to hear. And we believe a future more topical way of using Twitter is likely to expose people to a broader range of perspectives, a broader set of viewpoints, and help people sort of not be in a filter bubble.

NT So when you think about a healthy conversation, it's a conversation that has people with different follower bases and different viewpoints, whether it's different views on politics or different views on K-pop, having diverse audiences and healthier conversation.

PA Exactly right. It's both a diverse audience and a diverse set of speakers that you hear from, instead of you choosing to follow me, you follow a topic which exposes you to multiple voices, not just mine. And those multiple voices are likely to bring a diverse set of viewpoints and let you explore multiple sides to the topic of the conversation that you're part of.

I have grabbed a whole bunch of tweets based on a search query using twarc2. From those results I wanted to do some analysis on the tweets with a significant amount of replies, so I then used twarc2 again to grab all the tweets from that specific conversation id.

What I am a bit confused about is the reply count that is returned for the original parent tweet of the conversation thread, is smaller then the amount of individual tweets I had returned using the conversation id.

This feature removes the tag of your Twitter handle from any tweet and in the future prevents you from being tagged in any replies or receiving further notifications from that tweet. This does not stop you from viewing the Twitter thread. It does change your Twitter name to a gray color. And no, you cannot undo this, so if you leave a Twitter conversation, you cannot join it again right now.

Starting a conversation on Twitter is interesting, and it's also a major issue for users of the social network. Indeed, most of the people who use it personally or professionally, especially Community Managers and everyone who has an account, would like to communicate with their followers. The user experience that Twitter offers (everyone is equal) facilitates conversation and makes opportunities for exchanges common. You can make contact with anyone, on any tweet, unless the tweets are private, of course.

But it's sometimes difficult to seize the opportunities for exchange, and entering into a conversation can be intimidating. You can start your own conversation and get reactions from your subscribers and all twitterers more generally. ff782bc1db

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