A coder has created an internet bot that looks for new Donald Trump tweets and edits them to look like official White House statements.

Russel Neiss, who's from Missouri, started the RealPressSecBot account a few days ago.

He said he created it after reading tweets that considered the impact of referring to Mr Trump's comments as mere tweets, not statements made by the President of the United States.

The coder says he was inspired by two people close to the White House.

A tweet from Patrick Cunnane a former press aside for the Obama administration, seems to have suggested the form of the RealPressSecBot tweets.

He also told the Huffington Post that a tweet from Maggie Haberman had inspired him.

She's a White House correspondent for the New York Times and has called for President Trump to keep policy out of his tweets.

The Twitter bot scans for President Trump's tweets ever 15 minutes and uses algorithms to make adjustments.

Here's what President Trump had to say about the London terror attack at the weekend.

And here's what Twitter's latest press secretary turned it into.

The account now has more than 50,000 followers on Twitter, with some praising it as an alternative to the official press secretary, Sean Spicer.

But Russel, who has previously made apps like a mobile version of the Torah, admits the bot is still a work in progress.

He's welcoming followers who flag mistakes and glitches in the statements generated by the account.

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