The end of the Twitter word count?

The end of the Twitter word count?

Microblogging site Twitter is to stop counting photographs and links in its 140-character limit for tweets, according to a report from Bloomberg.

The change could be made within the next two weeks!

The company has not yet commented on the report.

But in January, founder Jack Dorsey said Twitter would explore ways of enabling its users to write longer posts.

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Links currently take up to 23 characters of a tweet, reducing the space available to users for their own writing when sharing other online content.

The 140-character limit was originally added to make tweets fit into a text message. When the company launched in 2006, before smartphones were available, many users typed their tweets as texts before posting them.

Mr Dorsey has since described the limit as a “beautiful constraint” that “inspires creativity and brevity”.

However, the company has struggled to attract new users and has seen its share price decline by more than 70% over the past year.

Last June, Twitter announced it would increase the limit on direct messages between one user and another to 10,000 characters.

In January, China’s biggest microblogging service, Sina Weibo, dropped its 140-character limit, allowing some users to write longer posts.