I would also find it very unlikely that Twitter will encourage using bitcoin on its platform. Doing so would create a lot of risks, one of which being that it gives people direct financial incentives to hack Twitter accounts. After Twitter was
hacked last year, they prevented (verified?) users from posting bitcoin addresses in their tweets.
Well, it seems the direction is toward integrating Bitcoin to the social media platform. There are always risks, of course. But a hack is a hack and even if there is no Bitcoin address on the profile, just like when the 2020 hack happened, the risk is still existent and damage could still be done. Even the current Tip Jar feature is risky enough if a hack occurs. The hacker could also change the user's PayPal, Cash App, Venmo, and other addresses.
PayPal, etc transactions are reversible, so if a twitter account hack results in someone sending payments to one of these types of accounts, the payments can be reversed. This is not true for bitcoin nor LN payments.
Like I mentioned, twitter reduced the future potential benefit to a similar hack as what took place in 2020 by preventing users from being able to post bitcoin addresses.