To go one step further, can we send the same message to humans too, i.e. I’m just curious: did that happen automatically, or did you have to customize the Medium api? It would seem to not be in Medium’s interest to automatically enable this as it reduces their visibility. I noticed that you add automatically the original, which is awesome! I think this boosts the original article in SEO. In Medium’s story settings, there’s an option to put a canonical link to the original article. Since I’ve created my own Category feed it has never worked on multiple refreshes, even when Mastodon, Twit, LI have all worked on same if you are going to give your Medium connection an overhaul, here’s the recommendations I gave for optimisations to support email again: Medium cross-posts only worked for me briefly back in August '20 when I had it on the basic everything RSS feed. Replies posted directly on Micro.blog aren’t included in your microblog RSS feed, so they won’t be sent to Twitter.
You can continue to reply and bookmark directly on Twitter, and also on Micro.blog. Similar rules apply for Medium, LinkedIn, and Mastodon, but with different length restrictions since the 280-character limit is specific to Twitter.
Posts with a title, regardless of length, will be sent to Twitter using the title and a link back to your microblog to read the full post.Longer posts without a title, but longer than 280 characters, will be truncated with a link back to your microblog.Short posts without a title, and less than 280 characters, will be sent to Twitter unmodified.Once enabled, any new posts (after you enable cross-posting) will be sent to Twitter, with these rules: You’ll be prompted to authorize your Twitter account, or an account on another service. Next to the RSS feed you would like to automatically cross-post, just click the “Add Twitter” link. You can access it under the “Edit Feeds & Cross-posting” button on your account. Micro.blog comes with built-in, native cross-posting to Twitter, Medium, LinkedIn, and Mastodon. You can also enable cross-posting to other supported services. You’re writing on your own site first, but the posts still go out to your Twitter followers. Now that you have a blog that contains all your microblog posts, you can wire it up to Twitter to automatically cross-post them as tweets.