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10/16/2009









PROLIFIC

RESISTANCE

INTRODUCTION TO TWITTER









A Beginner's Guide | Huang, Li, and Ma.

Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma







Table of Contents

Attribution ................................................................................................................................ 3

Our Contribution ................................................................................................................... 3

Wikipeda ............................................................................................................................... 3

Creative Commons ................................................................................................................ 4

Twitter....................................................................................................................................... 5

History ....................................................................................................................................... 6

Finances .................................................................................................................................... 8

Technology ................................................................................................................................ 9

A Twitter profile .................................................................................................................... 9

Interface ................................................................................................................................ 9

Content of tweets ............................................................................................................... 10

Demographics ......................................................................................................................... 11

Outages ................................................................................................................................... 12

The Twitter fail whale error message ................................................................................. 12

Privacy and security ................................................................................................................ 14

Criticism .................................................................................................................................. 15

Notable usage ......................................................................................................................... 17

Use in campaigning ............................................................................................................. 17

Used to survey opinion ....................................................................................................... 17

Use in public relations......................................................................................................... 17

Use in reporting dissent ...................................................................................................... 18

Use in protest and politics .................................................................................................. 18

Use in emergencies ............................................................................................................. 19

Use in criminal proceedings ................................................................................................ 20

Use in space exploration ..................................................................................................... 21

Similar services........................................................................................................................ 22

References .............................................................................................................................. 27

External links ........................................................................................................................... 38









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Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma







Attribution

All the content in this report, except for the Top Web Links section is from Wikipedia,

licensed under the Creative Commons Share-Alike 3.0 Unported License (see below for an

overview of both Wikipedia and the Creative Commons). The following picture shows the

full license below (it is also set up as a hyperlink to the original web source for this license).



(Wikipedia, 2009)









Figure 1 - Wikipedia Creative Commons License



Our Contribution

We have attempted to add extra value to the content by structuring it in an easy to read,

business report format and to add an informative “Top Web Links” section. We have also

added an index to help you find what you are looking for. We hope you find it useful and

worth the $1 purchase price. We have prepared this report as part of a MS Word 2007

assignment for BSYS 1000 – Computer Applications I that we are taking at the British

Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT). All proceeds will go to student clubs within the

School of Business at BCIT.



Wikipeda





Wikipedia is a multilingual, Web-based, free-content encyclopedia project based mostly on

anonymous contributions. The name “Wikipedia” is a portmanteau of the words wiki (a type

of collaborative Web site) and encyclopedia. Wikipedia’s articles provide links to guide the

user to related pages with additional information.







Wikipedia is written collaboratively by an international (and mostly anonymous) group of

volunteers. Anyone with internet access can write and make changes to Wikipedia articles.

There are no requirements to provide one’s real name when contributing; rather, each







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Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma







writer’s privacy is protected unless they choose to reveal their identity themselves. Since its

creation in 2001, Wikipedia has grown rapidly into one of the largest reference web sites,

attracting around 65 million visitors monthly as of 2009. There are more than 75,000 active

contributors working on more than 14,000,000 articles in more than 260 languages. As of

today, there are 3,062,069 articles in English. Every day, hundreds of thousands of visitors

from around the world collectively make tens of thousands of edits and create thousands of

new articles to augment the knowledge held by the Wikipedia encyclopedia. (See also:

Wikipedia:Statistics.)







Creative Commons

Creative Commons (CC) is a non-profit organization devoted to expanding the range of

creative works available for others to build upon legally and to share. The organization has

released several copyright-licenses known as Creative Commons licenses. These licenses

allow creators to communicate which rights they reserve, and which rights they waive for

the benefit of recipients or other creators.









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Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma









Twitter

Twitter is a free social networking and micro-blogging service that enables its users to send

and read messages known as tweets. Tweets are text-based posts of up to 140 characters

displayed on the author's profile page and delivered to the author's subscribers who are

known as followers. Senders can restrict delivery to those in their circle of friends or, by

default, allow open access. Users can send and receive tweets via the Twitter website, Short

Message Service (SMS) or external applications. While the service, itself, costs nothing to

use, accessing it through SMS may incur phone service provider fees.







The 140 character limit on message length was initially set for compatibility with SMS

messaging, and has brought to the web the kind of shorthand notation and slang commonly

used in SMS messages. The 140 character limit has also spurred the usage of URL shortening

services such as tinyurl, bit.ly and tr.im, and content hosting services, such as Twitpic and

NotePub to accommodate multimedia content and text longer than 140 characters.







Since its creation in 2006 by Jack Dorsey, Twitter has gained notability and popularity

worldwide. It is sometimes described as the "SMS of the Internet"[3] since the use of

Twitter's application programming interface for sending and receiving short text messages

by other applications often eclipses the direct use of Twitter.







Twitter is ranked as one of the 50 most popular websites worldwide by Alexa's web traffic

analysis.[4] Although estimates of the number of daily users vary because the company does

not release the number of active accounts, a February 2009 Compete.com blog entry ranked

Twitter as the third most used social network[5] based on their count of 6 million unique

monthly visitors and 55 million monthly visits.[5] In March 2009, a Nielsen.com blog ranked

Twitter as the fastest-growing site in the Member Communities category for February 2009.

Twitter had a monthly growth of 1,382 percent, Zimbio of 240 percent, followed by

Facebook with an increase of 228 percent.[6] However, only 40 percent of Twitter's users

are retained.[7]









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Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma









History



A blueprint sketch, circa 2000, by Jack Dorsey, envisioning an SMS-based social

networkTwitter began in a "daylong brainstorming session" that was held by board

members of the podcasting company Odeo in an attempt to break out of a creative slump.

At that meeting Jack Dorsey introduced the idea of an individual using an SMS service to

communicate with a small group, a concept partly inspired by the SMS group messaging

service TXTMob.[8]







The working name was just "Status" for a while. It actually didn’t have a name. We were

trying to name it, and mobile was a big aspect of the product early on ... We liked the SMS

aspect, and how you could update from anywhere and receive from anywhere.



We wanted to capture that in the name — we wanted to capture that feeling: the physical

sensation that you’re buzzing your friend’s pocket. It’s like buzzing all over the world. So we

did a bunch of name-storming, and we came up with the word "twitch," because the phone

kind of vibrates when it moves. But "twitch" is not a good product name because it doesn’t

bring up the right imagery. So we looked in the dictionary for words around it, and we came

across the word "twitter," and it was just perfect. The definition was "a short burst of

inconsequential information," and "chirps from birds." And that’s exactly what the product

was.







—Jack Dorsey[9]



The original product name or codename for the service was twttr, inspired by Flickr and the

fact that American SMS short codes are five characters. The developers initially

experimented with "10958″ as a short code, though later changed it to "40404″ for "ease

of use and memorability."[8] Work on the project started on March 21, 2006, when Dorsey

published the first Twitter message at 9:50 PM Pacific Standard Time (PST): "just setting up

my twttr".[10]









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The first Twitter prototype was used as an internal service for Odeo employees, later

launching publicly into a full-scale version in July 2006. In October 2006, Biz Stone, Evan

Williams, Dorsey and other members of Odeo formed Obvious Corporation and acquired

Odeo and all of its assets—including Odeo.com and Twitter.com—from the investors and

other shareholders.[11] Twitter later spun off into its own company in April 2007.[12]







The tipping point for Twitter's popularity was the 2007 South by Southwest (SXSW) festival.

During the event usage went from 20,000 tweets per day to 60,000.[13] "The Twitter people

cleverly placed two 60-inch plasma screens in the conference hallways, exclusively

streaming Twitter messages," remarked Newsweek's Steven Levy. "Hundreds of conference-

goers kept tabs on each other via constant twitters. Panelists and speakers mentioned the

service, and the bloggers in attendance touted it. Soon everyone was buzzing and posting

about this new thing that was sort of instant messaging and sort of blogging and maybe

even a bit of sending a stream of telegrams."[14] Reaction at the festival was

overwhelmingly positive. Laughing Squid blogger Scott Beale said Twitter "absolutely

rul[ed]" SXSW. Social software researcher Danah Boyd said Twitter "own[ed]" the

festival.[15] Twitter staff accepted their prize for the festival's Web Award with the remark

"we'd like to thank you in 140 characters or less. And we just did!"[16]









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Finances

Twitter's San Francisco headquarters located on the 4th floor of 539 Bryant StreetIn total,

Twitter has raised over US$57 million from venture capitalists. The exact amounts of funding

have not been publicly released. Twitter's first round of funding was for an undisclosed

amount that is rumored to have been between $1 million and $5 million.[17] Its B round of

funding in 2008 was for $22 million[18] and its C round of funding in 2009 was for $35

million from Institutional Venture Partners and Benchmark Capital along with an

undisclosed amount from other investors including Union Square Ventures, Spark Capital

and Insight Venture Partners.[17] Twitter is backed by Union Square Ventures, Digital

Garage, Spark Capital, and Bezos Expeditions.[19]







The Industry Standard has remarked that Twitter's long-term viability is limited by a lack of

revenue.[20] Twitter board member Todd Chaffee forecast that the company could make

money from e-commerce noting that many users may want to buy items directly from

Twitter since they already use it to get product recommendations and since companies

already use it to promote products.[21]







Some of Twitter's documents covering revenue and user growth were published on

TechCrunch after they were retrieved by a hacker. These contained internal projections that

in 2009 they would have revenues of $400,000 in the third quarter (Q3) and $4 million in the

fourth quarter (Q4) along with 25 million users at the end of the year. The projections for

the end of 2013 were $1.54 billion in revenue, $111 million in net earnings, and 1 billion

users.[1] No information about how Twitter plans to achieve those numbers has been

published. Biz Stone published a blog post suggesting legal action for revealing the details

was a possibility.[22]









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Technology





A Twitter profileTwitter has been described as akin to a Web-based Internet Relay

Chat (IRC) client.[23] The Twitter Web interface uses the Ruby on Rails framework.[24] From

the spring of 2007 until 2008 the actual messages were handled by a Ruby persistent queue

server called Starling[25] but since 2009 this has been gradually replaced with software

written in Scala.[26] The service's API allows other web services and applications to

integrate with Twitter.[27] Searches on the system make use of hashtags, words or phrases

prefixed with a #. A search for "beer" would turn up all messages that included #beer.[28]

Similarly, the @ sign followed by a username allows users to send messages directly to each

other. A message with @example would be directed at the user "example" although it can

still be read by anyone.[29]







Through SMS, users can communicate with Twitter through five gateway numbers: short

codes for the United States, Canada, India, New Zealand, and an Isle of Man-based number

for international use. There is also a short code in the United Kingdom which is only

accessible to those on the Vodafone and O2 networks.[30]







Interface

Technology author Steven Johnson describes the basic mechanics of Twitter as "remarkably

simple:"[31]







As a social network, Twitter revolves around the principle of followers. When you choose to

follow another Twitter user, that user's tweets appear in reverse chronological order on

your main Twitter page. If you follow 20 people, you'll see a mix of tweets scrolling down

the page: breakfast-cereal updates, interesting new links, music recommendations, even

musings on the future of education.



On April 30, 2009, Twitter tweaked its web interface, adding a search bar and a sidebar of

Trending Topics—the most common phrases currently appearing in messages. "Every public

update sent to Twitter from anywhere in the world 24/7 can be instantly indexed and made

discoverable via our newly launched real-time search," explained Biz Stone. "With this newly









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launched feature, Twitter has become something unexpectedly important—a discovery

engine for finding out what is happening right now."[32]







Content of tweets





Content of Tweets according to Pear Analytics.San Antonio-based market research firm Pear

Analytics analyzed 2,000 tweets (originating from the US and in English) over a 2-week

period from 11:00a to 5:00p (CST) and separated them into six categories:[33]







News



Spam



Self-promotion



Pointless babble



Conversational



Pass-along value



The firm found that "pointless babble" was the largest category of Twitter content, making

up 811 tweets or 40.55 percent of the total number of messages sampled.







Conversational messages accounted for 751 messages or 37.55 percent, tweets with "pass-

along value" i.e. retweets – accounted for 174 messages or 8.70 percent, self-promotion by

companies made up 117 tweets or 5.85 percent, spam was 75 tweets or 3.75 percent and

tweets with news from mainstream media publications accounted for 72 tweets or 3.60

percent.[33]







Social networking researcher Danah Boyd responded to the Pear Analytics survey by arguing

that what the Pear researchers labelled "pointless babble" is better characterized as

"peripheral awareness" or "social grooming".[34]









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Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma









Demographics

Most of Twitter's usage share comes from older adults who might not have used other

social sites before Twitter, said Jeremiah Owyang, an industry analyst studying social media.

"Adults are just catching up to what teens have been doing for years," he said.[35]







Just 11 percent of Twitter's users are aged 12 to 17, according to comScore.[35]







comScore attributes this to Twitter's "early adopter period" when the social network first

gained popularity in business settings and news outlets, which resulted in an older-skewing

early adopter profile. However, comScore as of late, has noted that as Twitter has begun to

"filter more into the mainstream, along with it came a culture of celebrity as Shaq, Britney

Spears and Ashton Kutcher joined the ranks of the Twitterati."[36] Nielsen Online estimates

that retention rate for Twitter is 40%.[37]









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Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma









Outages





The Twitter fail whale error message.When Twitter experiences an outage,

users see the "fail whale" error message image created by Yiying Lu,[38] an illustration of

red birds using nets to hoist a whale from the ocean along with the text [39] "Too many

tweets! Please wait a moment and try again."[39]







Twitter experienced approximately 98 percent uptime in 2007, or about six full days of

downtime.[40] Twitter's downtime was particularly noticeable during events popular with

the technology industry such as the 2008 Macworld Conference & Expo keynote

address.[41][42] During May 2008 Twitter's new engineering team made architectural

changes to deal with the scale of growth. Stability issues resulted in down time or temporary

feature removal.







In August 2008, Twitter withdrew free SMS services to users in the United Kingdom[43] and

for approximately five months instant messaging support via a XMPP bot was listed as being

"temporarily unavailable".[44] On October 10, 2008, Twitter's status blog announced that

instant messaging (IM) service was no longer a temporary outage and needed to be

revamped. Twitter aims to return its IM service at some point but says this requires some

major work.[45]







On June 12, 2009, in what was called a potential "Twitpocalypse", the unique identifier

associated with each tweet exceeded the limit for 32-bit signed integers.[46] While Twitter

itself was not affected, some third-party clients found that they could no longer access

recent tweets. Patches were quickly released, though some iPhone applications had to wait

for approval from the App Store.[47] On September 22, the identifier exceeded the limit for

32-bit unsigned integers, again breaking some third-party clients.[48]







On August 6, 2009, Twitter and Facebook suffered from a denial-of-service attack, causing

the Twitter website to be offline for several hours.[49] It was later confirmed that the









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attacks were directed at one pro-Georgian user around the anniversary of the 2008 South

Ossetia War, rather than the sites themselves.[50]









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Privacy and security

Twitter collects personally identifiable information about its users and shares it with third

parties. The service considers that information an asset, and reserves the right to sell it if the

company changes hands.[51] While Twitter displays no advertising, advertisers can target

users based on their history of tweets and sometimes may quote tweets in ads.[52]







A security vulnerability was reported on April 7, 2007, by Nitesh Dhanjani and Rujith. Since

Twitter used the phone number of the sender of an SMS message as authentication,

malicious users could update someone else's status page by using SMS spoofing.[53] The

vulnerability could only be used if the spoofer knew the phone number registered to their

victim's account. Within a few weeks of this discovery Twitter introduced an optional

personal identification number (PIN) that its users could specify to authenticate SMS-

originating messages.[54]







On January 5, 2009, 33 high-profile Twitter accounts were compromised after a Twitter

administrator's password was guessed by a dictionary attack.[55] Falsified tweets—including

sexually explicit and drug-related messages—were then sent from the accounts.[56]







Twitter launched the beta version of its Verified Accounts service on June 11, 2009, allowing

famous or notable people to make it clear which Twitter accounts belongs to them. The

home pages of these verified accounts display a badge to indicate this special status.[57]







Reception









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Criticism

The Wall Street Journal wrote that social-networking services such as Twitter "elicit mixed

feelings in the technology-savvy people who have been their early adopters. Fans say they

are a good way to keep in touch with busy friends. But some users are starting to feel "too"

connected, as they grapple with check-in messages at odd hours, higher cellphone bills and

the need to tell acquaintances to stop announcing what they're having for dinner."[58]

"Using Twitter for literate communication is about as likely as firing up a CB radio and

hearing some guy recite ‘The Iliad’ ", said tech writer Bruce Sterling.*59+ "For many people,

the idea of describing your blow-by-blow activities in such detail is absurd," hypothesized

writer Clive Thompson. "Why would you subject your friends to your daily minutiae? And

conversely, how much of their trivia can you absorb? The growth of ambient intimacy can

seem like modern narcissism taken to a new, supermetabolic extreme — the ultimate

expression of a generation of celebrity-addled youths who believe their every utterance is

fascinating and ought to be shared with the world."[60] On the other hand Steve Dotto

opines that part of Twitter's appeal is the challenge of trying to publish such messages in

tight constraints.[61] "The qualities that make Twitter seem inane and half-baked are what

makes it so powerful," says Jonathan Zittrain, professor of Internet law at Harvard Law

School.[62]







Nielsen Online reports that Twitter has a user retention rate of 40 percent. Many people

drop the service after a month so the site may potentially reach only about 10% of all

Internet users.[63] In 2009, Twitter won the "Breakout of the Year" Webby Award.[64][65]







During a February 2009 discussion on National Public Radio's Weekend Edition, Daniel

Schorr noted that Twitter accounts of events lacked rigorous fact-checking and other

editorial improvements. In response, Andy Carvin gave Schorr two examples of breaking

news stories that played out on Twitter and said users wanted first-hand accounts and

sometimes debunked stories.[66]







In an episode of The Daily Show on February 26, 2009, guest Brian Williams derided tweets

as only referring to the condition of the author in any given instant. Williams implied that he

would never use Twitter because nothing he did was interesting enough to publish in

Twitter format.[67]









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During another episode of The Daily Show on March 2, 2009, host Jon Stewart negatively

portrayed members of Congress who chose to "twitter" during President Obama's address

to Congress (on February 24, 2009) rather than pay attention to the content of the speech.

The show's Samantha Bee satirized media coverage of the service saying "there's no surprise

young people love it—according to reports of young people by middle aged people".[68]







In March 2009, the comic strip Doonesbury began to satirize Twitter. Many characters

highlighted the triviality of tweets although one defended the need to keep up with the

constant-update trend.[69] SuperNews! similarly satirized Twitter as an addiction to

"constant self-affirmation" and said tweets were nothing more than "shouts into the

darkness hoping someone is listening".[70]









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Notable usage



Use in campaigning

Twitter was used by candidates in the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign throughout the race.

Democratic Party nominee Barack Obama used it for publicity.[71] The Nader–Gonzalez

campaign updated its ballot access teams in real-time with Twitter and Google Maps.[72]

Twitter use increased by 43 percent on the day of the United States' 2008 election.[73]







Used to survey opinion

During the CBC News television coverage of the Canadian federal election on October 14,

2008, the CBC cited tweets regarding Elizabeth May and Stéphane Dion along with a graph

of items mentioned on Twitter as evidence that people were calling for Dion to step down in

response to the election results.[74]







Use in public relations

In Britain, the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills released a Twitter strategy

written for the use of other departments. The strategy advised the departments on why

Twitter was used by the Government and how they could tweet and promote their doing so

effectively.[75] The ICAEW suggested that the document could also be useful to the private

sector or as a general introduction to Twitter.[76]







In October 2008, a draft U.S. Army intelligence report identified Twitter as a "potential

terrorist tool". The report said it "is already used by some members to post and/or support

extremist ideologies and perspectives."[77][78]







David Saranga of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that on December 30,

2008, that Israel would be the first government to hold a worldwide press conference via

Twitter to take questions from the public about the war against Hamas in Gaza.[79]









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Use in reporting dissent

On April 10, 2008, James Buck, a graduate journalism student at University of California,

Berkeley, and his translator, Mohammed Maree, were arrested in Egypt for photographing

an anti-government[clarification needed] protest. On his way to the police station Buck used

his mobile phone to send the message “Arrested” to his 48 "followers" on Twitter. Those

followers contacted U.C. Berkeley, the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, and a number of press

organizations on his behalf. Buck was able to send updates about his condition to his

"followers" while being detained. He was released the next day from the Mahalla jail after

the college hired a lawyer for him.[80]







On April 7, 2009, thousands of young anti-communist[according to whom?] protesters

stormed the presidency and the parliament building in Chişinău, the capital of Moldova,

accusing the government of electoral fraud. Information about these events was

disseminated through Twitter using hashtag #pman. This hashtag came from the name of

the central square in Chişinău: Piaţa Marii Adunări Naţionale.*81+ Twitter was also used to

mobilize for the protests.[82]







Use in protest and politics

In June 2009, following allegations of fraud in the Iranian presidential election, protesters

used Twitter as a rallying tool and as a method of communication with the outside world

after the government blocked several other modes of communication.[83][84][85][86] On

June 15 Twitter rescheduled a planned 90-minute maintenance outage after a number of

Twitter users and the US State Department asked Twitter executives to delay the shutdown

because of concerns about the service's role as a primary communication medium by the

protesters in Iran.[87][88] CNN's coverage of the conflict was criticized in tweets with the

hashtag #CNNfail.[89] Twitter was also used to organize DDoS attacks against Iranian

government websites.[90]







In August 2009, when American opponents of President Barack Obama's health insurance

reform proposals attacked the British National Health Service, thousands of NHS users took

part in a Twitter campaign expressing their support for the NHS with use of the

#welovetheNHS hashtag. The hashtag was initiated by Irish comedy writer Graham Linehan,

who said he wanted to use a twitter campaign "as a counterweight against the lies of the

American right".[91] The campaign also received the support of several politicians including

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.[92][93][94]









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New York City activist Elliot Madison used twitter to report an order to disperse message

from the Pittsburgh police during the 2009 G-20 Pittsburgh protests. Police raided Madison's

hotel room, and one week later Madison's New York home was raided by FBI agents, who

conducted a sixteen-hour search. Police claim Madison and a co-defendant used computers

and a radio scanner to track police movements and then passed on that information to

protesters using cell phones and the social networking site Twitter. Madison is being

charged with hindering apprehension or prosecution, criminal use of a communication

facility, and possession of instruments of crime. The FBI took miscellany such as refrigerator

magnets, and a Curious George stuffed animal, despite that the warrant issued actually

asked for evidence that indicated that potentially there were violations of federal rioting

laws. In light of the United States Department of State's recent public support of twitter use

in the politics of Iran, Moldova, and Honduras it is asked whether the State Department

supports speech in the United States.[95][96][97]







When The Guardian newspaper was served in October 2009 with an unprecedented "super-

injunction" banning it from reporting on a parliamentary matter, it published a cryptic

article reporting what little it could. The paper claimed that this case appears "to call into

question privileges guaranteeing free speech established under the 1688 Bill of

Rights".[98][99] Alan Rusbridger, the paper's editor, credited Twitter users with taking the

initiative to uncover the muck that the press was not allowed to print, namely that the

injunction was taken out by the London solicitors Carter-Ruck on behalf of commodities

trader Trafigura, who did not want public discussion of the 2006 Côte d'Ivoire toxic waste

dump scandal and the resulting Minton Report (available on Wikileaks [100]) The reporting

injunction was lifted the same day, as Carter Ruck withdrew it before The Guardian could

challenge it in the High Court.[101] Rusbridger credited the rapid back-down of Carter-Ruck

to Twitter[102], as did a BBC article[103]; the Wikipedia Reference Desk also quickly figured

out what the cryptic article referred to[104].







Use in emergencies

Research reported in New Scientist in May 2008[105] found that blogs, maps, photo sites

and instant messaging systems like Twitter did a better job of getting information out during

emergencies than either the traditional news media or government emergency services. The

study also found that those using Twitter during the fires in California in October 2007 kept

their followers (who were often friends and neighbors) informed of their whereabouts and

of the location of various fires minute by minute. Organizations that support relief efforts

are also using Twitter. The American Red Cross started using Twitter[106] to exchange

minute-to-minute information about local disasters including statistics and directions.[107]









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During the 2008 Mumbai attacks eyewitnesses sent an estimated 80 tweets every 5 seconds.

Twitter users on the ground helped compile a list of the dead and injured. In addition, users

sent out vital information such as emergency phone numbers and the location of hospitals

needing blood donations.[108] CNN called this "the day that social media appeared to come

of age" since many different groups made significant use of Twitter to gather news and

coordinate responses.[108]







In January 2009, US Airways Flight 1549 experienced multiple bird strikes and had to be

ditched in the Hudson River. Janis Krums, a passenger on one of the ferries that rushed to

help, took a picture of the downed plane as passengers were still evacuating and sent it to

Twitpic before any other media arrived at the scene.[109][110]







The Australian Country Fire Authority used Twitter to send out regular alerts and updates

regarding the February 2009 Victorian bushfires.[111] During this time the Prime Minister of

Australia, Kevin Rudd, also used his Twitter account to send out information on the fires,

how to donate money and blood, and where to seek emergency help.[112]







Also in April, public health departments used Twitter to provide updates on H1N1 cases.[113]







Use in criminal proceedings

The first criminal prosecution arising from Twitter posts began in April 2009. Agents of the

FBI arrested Daniel Knight Hayden. Hayden was accused of sending tweets threatening

violence in connection with his plan to attend a Tea Party protest in Oklahoma City,

Oklahoma.[114]







In July 2009, Horizon Realty Group, a Chicago real estate management company, sued a

former tenant, Amanda Bonnen, for libel based on a Twitter message sent to friends.

Horizon contends that Bonnen defamed Horizon by posting a tweet to her friends that said,

"You should just come anyway. Who said sleeping in a moldy apartment was bad for you?

Horizon realty thinks it's ok." Horizon asked for at least $50,000 for the alleged libel.[115]

The lawsuit prompted widespread comment from journalists, bloggers, and legal

experts.[116]









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Use in space exploration

In February 2009, NASA won a Shorty Award for its near real-time status updates in 2008 of

the unmanned Mars Phoenix Lander mission.[117]







In May 2009, astronaut Mike Massimino used Twitter to send updates of the Hubble Space

Telescope repair mission, the first time Twitter was used in space.[118][119]







On October 21, 2009, Nicole Stott and her Expedition 21 crewmate aboard the International

Space Station, Jeff Williams, are scheduled to participate in the first tweetup from the

station with members of the public gathered at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. This

will involve the first live Twitter connection for the astronauts[120]. Previously, astronauts

onboard the Space Shuttle or ISS have sent the messages they desire to send as tweets

down to Mission Control which then posted the message via the Internet to Twitter.[121]







NASA also provides an aggregate feed of all official NASA astronauts' tweets via NASA

Astronauts on Twitter.









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Similar services

Main article: Micro-blogging



A number of services like Twitter exist, including some which send text messages to multiple

people at once. Some services use a similar concept as Twitter but add country-specific

services or combine the micro-blogging facilities with other services, such as file sharing.

Other services provide similar functionality, but within closed networks for corporations,

nonprofits, universities, and other organizations.[122]







See also



Comparison of micro-blogging services



List of Twitter services and applications









Page 22 of 39

Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma









Page 23 of 39

Resources

Here is a list of what we feel are the top websites to help new users of Twitter get started.



Table 1- Top Web Sources



Top Web Source Source URL

Twitter, Google and Bing Tips from the T-list http://www.tipsfromthetlist.com/17061.html



Twitter CrunchBase http://www.crunchbase.com/company/twitter



Twitter in Plain English Commoncraft http://www.commoncraft.com/Twitter



Newbie's guide to Twitter Cnet news http://news.cnet.com/newbies-guide-to-twitter/



LOB http://www.lostartofblogging.com/twitter-guide

Twitter: Why it’s So Great And How To

Effectively Use It

TED2009 Twitter Guide Billions With Zero Knowledge http://www.billionswithzeroknowledge.com/2009/02/06/ted2009-

twitter-guide/



Twitter 101 http://business.twitter.com/twitter101/

So what does twitter do for businesses?

24 Webdesigner Depot http://www.webdesignerdepot.com/2009/03/the-ultimate-guide-

MarThe Ultimate Guide for Everything for-everything-twitter/

Twitter

Twitter Guide: How To Do Interesting Digital inspiration http://www.labnol.org/internet/twitter-guide-do-everything-with-

Things With Twitter twitter/4916/



Twitter Guide For Writers Subscribe http://www.blatherings.com/2009/08/twitter-guide-for-writers/

Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma









Page 25 of 39

A

F R

All the content · 3

Facebook · 12 ranked · 5



C

G T

Chat · 9

comScore · 11 Garage · 8 The firm found · 10

The tipping · 7

Twitter · 9

E O



experiences · 12 organization · 4 W



wanted to capture · 6

Web-based · 3

Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma









References

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2. Dorsey, Jack (2009-09-18). "2009 Person of the Year ceremony and presentation".

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networking-20090210-83fk.html. Retrieved 2009-06-07.



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25.



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119. Bates, Claire (2009-05-13). "Hubble astronaut sends first ever Twitter message from

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120. John Yembrick (October 1, 2009). "NASA Hosts Long-Distance Tweetup with Astronauts

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185_ISS_Tweetup.html. Retrieved October 20, 2009.









Page 36 of 39

Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma







121. Etan Horowitz (May 22, 2009). "The great debate over Astro Mike's 'tweets from

space'". The Orlando Sentinel.

http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/etan_on_tech/2009/05/the-great-debate-over-astro-

mikes-tweets-from-space.html. Retrieved October 2, 2009.





122. Calore, Michael (2007-05-15). "Twitter Cloning: Tiny Blogs Bloom Everywhere". Wired

(magazine). http://www.wired.com/software/webservices/news/2007/05/twitter_clones.

Retrieved 2009-06-17.









Page 37 of 39

Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma







External links

Look up twitter in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.



Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Twitter







Official website



Twitter Search



Twitter Demographics and Audience Profile at Quantcast



Twitter in Depth Archive by The Daily Telegraph



*show+v • d • eTwitter







Clients List of Twitter services and applications · Tweetie · Twitterrific







People Jack Dorsey (founder/chairman) · Evan Williams (CEO) · Biz Stone (creative officer)







Other Twitpic







*show+v • d • eSocial network







Social network for fun Bebo · Friendster · Facebook · Hi5 · MySpace · Twitter







Social network for work LinkedIn







Historical social networks SixDegrees.com · Tribe.net







White label social networks and platforms Ning · XING









Page 38 of 39

Introduction to Twitter by Huang, Li, and Ma







Software, tools, features, and infrastructure Facebook Connect · OpenSocial · Social

network analysis software







Theory and related concepts Small world experiment · Small-world network · Social

network · Social network service







Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitter"



Categories: Online social networking | Twitter | Social media | Web 2.0 | Blog hosting

services | Companies based in San Francisco, California | Internet properties established in

2006 | Real-time web



Hidden categories: Wikipedia pages semi-protected against vandalism | Wikipedia

protected pages without expiry | All pages needing cleanup | Wikipedia articles needing

clarification from October 2009 | All NPOV disputes | NPOV disputes from October

2009Views



This page was last modified on 20 October 2009 at 09:31.Text is available under the Creative

Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. See Terms of Use for

details.



Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit

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