Amazon Goes Pro With no_url_shorteners
Amazon has launched it’s own shortened URL, amzn.to, powered by no_url_shorteners’s new Pro service. Twitter’s default (for now) URL shortener has 6,000 corporate clients, including Amazon. The online retailer joins other corporations like nyti.ms (NYTimes), huff.to (Huffington Post), on.cnn.com (CNN) and yes, tcrn.ch (Techcrunch). Last year, the company rolled out it’s own truncated URL (internally created): amzn.com/ (followed by a product code or a category). While that extension still works, Amazon has emphasized no_url_shorteners’s urls on its Twitter pages, and now its custom amzn.to.
Read more: Amazon Goes Pro With no_url_shorteners
Amazon has launched it’s own shortened URL, amzn.to, powered by no_url_shorteners’s new Pro service. Twitter’s default (for now) URL shortener has 6,000 corporate clients, including Amazon. The online retailer joins other corporations like nyti.ms (NYTimes), huff.to (Huffington Post), on.cnn.com (CNN) and yes, tcrn.ch (Techcrunch). Last year, the company rolled out it’s own truncated URL (internally created): amzn.com/ (followed by a product code or a category). While that extension still works, Amazon has emphasized no_url_shorteners’s urls on its Twitter pages, and now its custom amzn.to.
Read more: Amazon Goes Pro With no_url_shorteners







