Twitter seems to be doing fine, to me. It's a unique and focused service. Digg was doing fine as well until they released a site makeover that completely ignored why their community was interested in the site. Twitter's recent improvements were well received, in contrast.
You've actually of that opinion about Facebook, but meanwhile, large numbers of people never cease to predict that Facebook will soon control the entire universe. So, opinions vary.
I don't know about that. Among the early adopter crowd, it is certainly true, but Twitter much larger than that group now. Most people use Twitter from the web or from an official Twitter app. I still think Twitter is going to have very serious monetization problems, but third party clients aren't really a problem. If anything, the third parties should be concerned about hitching their wagon to a company that might not be too concerned about their success.
Quite true, it's not fun at all to develop software or a business based on a platform and service that might change to make your business obsolete at anytime.
Fred Wilson, an investor in Twitter, made a post when the article you linked to came out, stating how fantastic he thought it was that Twitter was screwing over their third party developers. A shift from 'filling in the gaps' to 'building on the platform', he thinks. This doesn't make me comfortable as I depend on a couple of other companies he is involved with.
That's about whether Twitter will make a lot of money, though. The 'digg' issue is not that digg failed to monetize, but that users abandoned it in droves and it seems irrelevant, isn't it?
Twitter could always restrict their API, too, to discourage or make some third party tools obsolete. This would only be accepted if they made their own available with applications similar features and quality.
You've actually of that opinion about Facebook, but meanwhile, large numbers of people never cease to predict that Facebook will soon control the entire universe. So, opinions vary.