One of the top New York Time Reporter Maggie Haberman has left the platform named Twitter. After getting heavily abused she decided to step out of Twitter with his statement in “Why I Needed to Pull Back from Twitter” article.

Maggie Haberman is a White house correspondence reporter for New York Time. She had been using his Twitter account to share the latest story and her personal thoughts.

But after being attacked by twitter warrior, she called Twitter as “The viciousness, toxic partisan anger, and intellectual dishonesty are at all-time highs.”

Criticizing Twitter she has stated, “Twitter has stopped being a place where I could learn things I didn’t know”.

According to Haberman, Twitter is now used to tell things that are not possible at face-to-face.

“Twitter is now an anger video game for many users,” she said.

After facing those types of the situation on Twitter, finally, she declares it was a great of loss her energy and mind also.

Maggie Haberman discovered herself as a victim of those Twitter attack and she felt so upset about that.

She also tells that, in the era of Trump more journalists are also get trolled and abused on Twitter.

“Tone often overshadows the actual news. All outrages appear equal. And that makes it harder for significant events” she tells about irrelevance timeline of Twitter.

CEO of Twitter

In immediate response Twitter CEO, Jack Dorsey twitted to Maggie Haberman and said: “There is an important discussion about journalism that must take place, including about how all of us performed during the 2016 campaign, but Twitter is not where a nuanced or thoughtful discussion can happen”.

A few thoughts on @maggieNYT’s article on Twitter. A lot of fair critiques within. https://t.co/iXM2KJMI6t — jack (@jack) July 21, 2018

He also agrees with Maggie Haberman that Twitter is not a place for nuanced discussion.

Lastly, he said that they will update the algorithm of Twitter and make it better. He hopes that Twitter will start showing more contextual conversations and good stuff to their users.