Twitter, which was created by a 10-person startup in San Francisco called Obvious, is a heady mixture of messaging, social networking, “microblogging” and something called “presence,” shorthand for the idea that people should enjoy an “always on” virtual omnipresence.
Twitter's rapid growth made it the object of intense interest and a fair amount of ridicule, as it was derided as high-tech trivia or the latest in time-wasting devices. But its use in Iran in the wake of the disputed presidential election of June 2009 to organize protests and disseminate information in the face of a news media crackdown brought it new respect.
“Twitterers” or "tweeters" send and receive short messages, called “tweets,” on Twitter’s Web site, with instant messaging software, or with mobile phones.
When a user is logged in through the Web or a cellphone, it asks one simple question, “What are you doing?” Users answer in 140 characters or fewer. While some of these tweets have the profundity of haiku, most are mundane, like “Sure is pretty out tonight” or “My eyes itch. I am very aggravated.”
Unlike most text messages, tweets are routed among networks of friends. Strangers, called “followers,” can also choose to receive the tweets of people they find interesting.
Read More...
The company has no discernible revenue and, as of mid-2009, about 60 employees. Biz Stone, a Twitter founder, said at the time that the company had no plans to begin widely running ads until 2010, although it was experimenting with running advertisements on its Web site. In September 2009, the company was set to raise about $100 million of new funding that would value the company at around $1 billion.
In its short history, Twitter has become an important marketing tool for celebrities, politicians and businesses, promising a level of intimacy never before approached online, as well as giving the public the ability to speak directly to people and institutions once comfortably on a pedestal.
But someone has to do all that writing, even if each entry is barely a sentence long. In many cases, celebrities and their handlers have turned to outside writers — ghost Twitterers, who keep fans updated on the latest twists and turns, often in the star’s own voice.
It is not only celebrities who are forced to look to a team to produce real-time commentary on daily activities, but also politicians like Ron Paul, who have assigned staff members to create Twitter posts and Facebook personas. Barack Obama’s presidential campaign used Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.
In 2009, people in Iran and Moldova created their own searchable tags on Twitter to organize protests against their governments and share information with each other and the world. In April, Moldovans used the network to rally more than 10,000 young people against their country's Communist leadership. And in June, Iranian opposition supporters angry over presidential election results used Twitter and other forms of new media to share news on rallies, police crackdowns on protesters, and analysis.
With the authorities blocking text-messaging on cellphones, Twitter has become a handy alternative for information-hungry Iranians. While Iran has also tried to block Twitter posts, Iranians are skilled at using proxy sites or other methods to circumvent the official barriers.
On June 15, a State Department official e-mailed Twitter to request a delay in scheduled maintenance of its global network, which would have cut off service while Iranians were using Twitter to swap information and inform the outside world about the mushrooming protests around Tehran.
Twitter complied with the request and briefly postponed its upgrade. The episode demonstrates the extent to which the Obama administration views social networking as a new diplomatic tool. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton talks regularly about the power of e-diplomacy, particularly in places where the mass media are repressed.
Twitter was also in the news in July, when a hacker made internal company documents public after breaking into an employee's e-mail account. And in August, it was shut down for much of a day by a two-pronged cyberattack that security experts said was aimed at a blogger from the Republic of Georgia; it was timed to coincide with the anniversary of the 2008 conflict between Georgia and Russia.
Source: nytimes.com
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(249)
-
▼
October
(87)
- Facebook, Twitter crooks just a click away
- Defriending can bruise your 'digital ego'
- Beautiful Alaska Nature Wallpapers
- Beautiful Winter Wallpapers
- Amazing Halloween Wallpapers
- Sports Today, October 31, 2009
- His Holiness the Dalai Lama arrives in Japan
- News Today, October 31, 2009
- Internet domain names set to appear in non-Latin s...
- News Today, October 30, 2009
- Sports Today, October 30, 2009
- MySpace Talks Content-Sharing with Facebook
- Google changes to aid music searches
- Amazing Beaches Wallpapers
- News Today, October 29, 2009
- Sports Today, October 29, 2009
- Halloween Pumpkin Season 2009
- What Happens to Your Facebook After You Die?
- "This is it", Michael Jackson
- Sports Today, October 28, 2009
- Sports Today, October 28, 2009
- Ares 1-X Rocket Launch Preview
- News Today, October 27, 2009
- Iaquinta and Totti undergo knee surgery
- Coach Ramos dismissed by CSKA Moscow
- Sports Today, October 27, 2009
- Making the most of Twitter
- To tweet or not to tweet?
- Cuche powers to giant slalom win; first blood to S...
- Jonzon birdies final hole to clinch Castello Maste...
- Remarkable Rossi crowned MotoGP champion
- Patriots brush aside Buccaneers as NFL returns to ...
- Liverpool beat Man Utd in Anfield thriller
- News Today, October 26, 2009
- Sports Today
- Wonderful Lands Wallpapers
- News Today, October 25, 2009
- Dyson's Bladeless Fan: Worth the Hefty Cost?
- News Today, October 24, 2009
- Carrie Underwood Is No Fan of Twitter
- News Today, October 23, 2009
- Amazing Neon Wallpapers 1440 X 900
- 8 Hidden Gems in Windows 7
- Windows 7 Highlights
- Review: Windows 7 Is Vast Improvement Over Vista
- Beautiful Canada Nature Scenery Wallpapers [1920x1...
- News Today, October 22, 2009
- News Today, October 21, 2009
- Emma Roberts Threatens to Delete Her Twitter Becau...
- News Today, October 20, 2009
- Amazing Windows 7 Wallpapers 1920 X 1200
- News Today, October 19, 2009
- Career Tips From Don Draper
- News Today, October 18, 2009
- Asia: Philippines, Taiwan, Indonesia Gained More T...
- News Today, October 17, 2009
- Slash, the Rocker, Doubles His Facebook Fans to 1M...
- News Today, October 15, 2009
- New Zealand Scenery Wallpapers [1920X1200]
- Iceland Scenery Wallpapers [1920X1200]
- Wild Africa Wallpapers Collection 1920x1200
- Asia High Quality Wallpapers 1999x1333
- News Today, October 14, 2009 (1)
- Traditional Chinese Items Wallpapers 1920 X 1200
- Facebook Hiring to Expand European Advertising Pre...
- Compete: Facebook Added 2.4 Million US Uniques in ...
- Art Works - Animal Pictures
- News Today, October 13, 2009 (1)
- The Three Countries That Lost Facebook Users Last ...
- News Today, October 12, 2009 (2)
- Beautiful Landscape Wallpapers 1140x990
- News Today, October 12, 2009 (1)
- Animals Wallpapers 1600X1200
- Life Under The Sea Wallpapers 1920X1200
- News Today, October 11, 2009 (1)
- Motor Cycles Wallpapers 1024X768
- Two Apps for Analyzing You and Your Friends on Fac...
- Facebook’s Growth in Germany and Austria: Das ist ...
- The 15 Largest Restaurant Pages on Facebook
- Facecard Lets You Spend Cash in Facebook
- 10 MORE Must Have Twitter Tools
- Latest Data on Facebook’s US Growth by Age and Gen...
- Facebook Releases Connect for iPhone 1.1
- Post Tweets Directly from Facebook with Social Twi...
- The Facebook Global Monitor – October 2009 Edition...
- The Top 25 Facebook Games for October 2009
-
▼
October
(87)
No comments:
Post a Comment