Intending to prevent minors from viewing inappropriate material, Twitter is asking users to verify their birthdates for viewing sensitive content.
According to IANS, the micro-blogging site is gradually rolling out a feature to restrict sensitive tweets, unless users have a birthdate attached to their accounts and are over 18.
“We are constantly iterating on our work to give people more choice and control over their experience, as well as to make Twitter safer for everyone,” a company spokesperson was quoted as saying.
“We are slowly rolling out a feature to aid in restricting certain sensitive content from people who are under 18 years old or have not submitted their date of birth,” the spokesperson added.
Several users noted that the microblogging platform had asked them to mention their birthdates for seeing specific tweets over the past few days.
The platform did not clarify if it is rolling out the feature globally. Plus, users have raised questions about the company’s privacy practices, as the prompt to enter the birthdate to access sensitive content says the data might be used for targeted ads.
The broad categories covered by Twitter‘s sensitive content policy include explicit content, graphic violence, excessive gore, and hateful images.
Although the company doesn’t prohibit explicit content, it does request that users who upload it designate it as sensitive and adjust their account settings accordingly.
Netflix to acquire WBD for total enterprise value of $82.7bn
Madras HC halts release of ‘Akhanda 2’ in major relief for Eros International
Kevin Vaz highlights India’s content surge at Asia TV Forum 2025
Gaurav Gandhi honored as M&E visionary at CII Summit 2025
Ministry of Tourism signs MoU with Netflix to showcase India’s destinations globally
GTPL Hathway unveils ‘GTPL Infinity’, new satellite-based HITS platform
‘One Two Cha Cha Chaa’ set for theatrical release Jan 2026
Nokia, Airtel team up to open 5G network APIs for India’s developers
Meta signs new deals with news outlets to boost AI
Prime Video sets final season of ‘Four More Shots Please!’
Netflix-WBD deal faces anti-trust, political pushback 


