The first video that began today will be auto-captioned, wrote Twitter support. “To see them, turn on captioning in your mobile phone settings or select the CC button on the web.” On iOS and Android phones, videos will play in automatic form. For web users, there’s a CC button so you’d better turn on and off closed-captioning like you do. The phrase “transcriptions” is apparently published by Microsoft. There is clearly a great new accessibility feature for people who are deaf or anyone who is too bad to hear, but that also a really beautiful new feature of all kinds. I’m unsure of how many times I have been logging through Twitter only to get stuck in a movie that is tense because I forgot to mute my phone following a phone call. This surprise means that I prefer to leave for family gatherings and medical appointments. The feature is nice and no. The users of Twitter are already calling for more features that allow users to edit video captions. The larger the tech company is, the slower it is to add services. Patience is an honour. On the other hand, maybe things will be a little more quickly now that Twitter has a new CEO. Jack Dorsey stepped down at the end of November, to put Parag Agrawal in charge. Since Agrawal is directing things, Twitter will probably have a more hands-on CEO.