PHILADELPHIA -- For the second straight week, the Philadelphia Eagles took a little poke at the NFL for its new social media policy.

Teams are no longer permitted to post highlights from television directly to social media or turn highlights into GIFs. Last week, the Eagles and Browns responded by posting videos of electronic football figures to simulate highlights.

This week, the Eagles’ Twitter account opted for flipbooks.

Sturgis hits from 21 and the #Eagles are up 21-3 with 6:09 to go!#FlyEaglesFly pic.twitter.com/E2VleTPyEG — Philadelphia Eagles (@Eagles) October 23, 2016

D.G.B.



A five-yard pass from Wentz to Green-Beckham has the #Eagles up 18-3 with 5:45 to go in the third. #FlyEaglesFly pic.twitter.com/btIdfhQeAU — Philadelphia Eagles (@Eagles) October 23, 2016

Under the revised policy, teams are also not allowed to shoot video inside the stadium during the game and post it on social media and cannot use Facebook Live, Periscope or any other app to stream anything live within the stadium. Per ESPN’s Darren Rovell, league executives want to make sure that content generated within the stadiums is hosted by team websites so that the league maintains control of what is disseminated.

First-time violators of the policy can be hit with a fine of up to $25,000, and the penalty jumps to as much as $50,000 the second time around.