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*10 Downing Street, the website of the British [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]], [[Gordon Brown]], has started using Twitter.<ref>http://twitter.com/DowningStreet</ref>
*10 Downing Street, the website of the British [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]], [[Gordon Brown]], has started using Twitter.<ref>http://twitter.com/DowningStreet</ref>
*The use of Twitter by victims, bystanders, and the public to gather news and coordinate responses to the [[November 2008 Mumbai attacks|November 2008 Mumbai siege]] led CNN to call it "the day that [[social media]] appeared to come of age."<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/11/27/mumbai.twitter/index.html|publisher=CNN|title=Tweeting the terror: How social media reacted to Mumbai|author=Stephanie Busari|date=2008-11-27}}</ref>
*The use of Twitter by victims, bystanders, and the public to gather news and coordinate responses to the [[November 2008 Mumbai attacks|November 2008 Mumbai siege]] led CNN to call it "the day that [[social media]] appeared to come of age."<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/11/27/mumbai.twitter/index.html|publisher=CNN|title=Tweeting the terror: How social media reacted to Mumbai|author=Stephanie Busari|date=2008-11-27}}</ref>
*Various pop culture icons and celebrities, such as [[Britney Spears]], [[Gary Vaynerchuk]], [[Stephen Fry]], [[Jordan Kensington]], [[Jonathan Ross]], [[John Cleese]], [[Richard Bacon]], [[Lily Allen]], [[Will Carling]], [[Robert Llewellyn]], [[Alan Carr]], [[Phill Jupitus]], [[Shaquille O'Neal]], [[Lance Armstrong]], [[John Mayer]], [[Lupe Fiasco]], [[Philip Schofield]], [[Taylor Swift]], [[Gregg "Opie" Hughes]], [[Chris Moyles]], [[Justin Hawkins]], [[Adam Ficek]], [[Soleil Moon Frye]], [[Joe Jonas]], [[James Morrison]], [[Ashton Kutcher]] and [[Demi Moore]] use Twitter to communicate with fans.
*Various pop culture icons and celebrities, such as [[Britney Spears]], [[Gary Vaynerchuk]], [[Stephen Fry]], [[Jordan Kensington]], [[Jonathan Ross]], [[John Cleese]], [[Richard Bacon]], [[Lily Allen]], [[Will Carling]], [[Robert Llewellyn]], [[Alan Carr]], [[Phill Jupitus]], [[Shaquille O'Neal]], [[Lance Armstrong]], [[John Mayer]], [[Lupe Fiasco]], [[Philip Schofield]], [[Taylor Swift]], [[Gregg "Opie" Hughes]], [[Chris Moyles]], [[Justin Hawkins]], [[Adam Ficek]], [[Soleil Moon Frye]], [[Joe Jonas]], [[David Henrie]], [[James Morrison]], [[Ashton Kutcher]] and [[Demi Moore]] use Twitter to communicate with fans.
*[[Sir Richard Branson]] has a Twitter account and advertises jobs for [[Virgin Group|Virgin]] on it.
*[[Sir Richard Branson]] has a Twitter account and advertises jobs for [[Virgin Group|Virgin]] on it.
*Dutch Minister of Foreign affairs [[Maxime Verhagen]] is a regular user of Twitter.<ref>[http://www.frankwatching.com/archive/2008/11/24/minister-verhagen-%E2%80%9Cvoorlopig-ga-ik-door-met-twitteren%E2%80%9D/ Minister Verhagen: “Voorlopig ga ik door met twitteren”] (Frankwatching, 24/11/2008, visited 13/02/2009</ref>
*Dutch Minister of Foreign affairs [[Maxime Verhagen]] is a regular user of Twitter.<ref>[http://www.frankwatching.com/archive/2008/11/24/minister-verhagen-%E2%80%9Cvoorlopig-ga-ik-door-met-twitteren%E2%80%9D/ Minister Verhagen: “Voorlopig ga ik door met twitteren”] (Frankwatching, 24/11/2008, visited 13/02/2009</ref>

Revision as of 15:30, 22 February 2009

Twitter, Inc.
Company typePrivate
Industrymobile social network service, micro-blogging
Founded2006
FounderJack Dorsey Edit this on Wikidata
Headquarters,
Key people
Jack Dorsey, Evan Williams, Biz Stone
Number of employees
29[1]
Websitehttp://twitter.com/

Twitter is a social networking and micro-blogging service that allows its users to send and read other users' updates (known as tweets), which are text-based posts of up to 140 characters in length.

Updates are displayed on the user's profile page and delivered to other users who have signed up to receive them. Senders can restrict delivery to those in their circle of friends (delivery to everyone being the default). Users can receive updates via the Twitter website, SMS, RSS, or through applications such as TwitterMobile, Tweetie, Twinkle, Twitterrific, Feedalizr, Facebook, and Twidget, a widget application. Four gateway numbers are currently available for SMS: short codes for the United States, Canada, and India, and a United Kingdom-based number for international use. Several third parties offer posting and receiving updates via email. Estimates of the number of daily users vary as the company does not release the number of active accounts. In November 2008, Jeremiah Owyang of Forrester Research estimated that Twitter had 4-5 million users.[2] A February 2009 Compete.com blog entry ranks Twitter as the third largest social network (behind Facebook and MySpace), and puts the number of users at roughly 6 million and the number of monthly visitors at 55 million.[3]

Twitter messages may be tagged using hashtags, a word or phrase prefixed with a #, such as #beer.[4] This enables tweets on a specific subject to be found by simply searching for their common hashtag, provided that the user has tagged their tweet.

History

Template:FixBunching

Twitter founders Biz Stone and Jack Dorsey in 2008 accepting a TechCrunch award for best mobile startup.

Template:FixBunching

Evan Williams in 2007.

Template:FixBunching Twitter was founded by Jack Dorsey, Noah Glass, Biz Stone, and Evan Williams, began as a research and development project inside San Francisco podcasting company Odeo in March 2006.[5]

Comedian Josh Marino created the twitter acronym; Typing What I'm Thinking To Everyone Reading.

Odeo was co-founded by Noah Glass and blogger Evan Williams. In October 2006 the company was bought out by management, and Williams, Stone, and other Odeo employees started another company named Obvious Corp. to operate Odeo and Twitter, another startup Williams had been testing in the offices for about a year.[6] Twitter had been initially used internally by Odeo's employees and became a product of Obvious at this time.[7]

The service rapidly gained popularity: In March 2007, it won the 2007 South by Southwest Web Award in the blog category.[8] Dorsey, the man behind the concept of Twitter,[9] gave the following playful acceptance speech at SXSW: "We'd like to thank you in 140 characters or less. And we just did!"

In April 2007, Obvious spun off the service as a separate entity under the name Twitter, Inc.,[10] with Dorsey as CEO until 2008 when Williams replaced him.[11]

"Summize" was an internet startup using the Twitter XMPP stream to allow users to search twitter conversations in near real-time. On 15 July 2008, Twitter acquired Summize and rolled it into their own site at the subdomain search.twitter.com. At the time of the sale, Summize had 6 employees, of which 5 went on to work at Twitter. CEO Jay Verdy moved on to a new project.[12]

Japanese version

On April 22, 2008, Twitter announced on its blog that it had created a version of Twitter for Japanese users, because they are prominent users of the service, despite the user interface being completely in English.[13] One week after its launch it was reported that the Japanese version of Twitter had started gaining users; Japanese is now the second most-used language on Twitter.[14] Unlike the US service, the Japanese service is supported by advertising.[15]

Reactions

Twitter began experiencing problems related to its growing number of users in 2007. The service has experienced outages resulting from traffic overloads due to its increased popularity.[16] The Wall Street Journal wrote, "These social-networking services 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."[17] Satirical references have also been made, such as speculations as to what Shakespeare[1] and Freud[2] might tweet, if they used Twitter.

Finances

About USD $57 million of Twitter is owned by venture capitalists. Williams raised about USD $22 million in venture capital.[18] Twitter is backed by Union Square Ventures, Digital Garage, Spark Capital, and Bezos Expeditions (led by Jeff Bezos of Amazon).[19] Institutional Venture Partners and Benchmark Capital backed Twitter in 2009, investing an additional USD $35 million.The Industry Standard has pointed to its lack of revenue as limiting its long-term viability.[20] As of January 2009, the service sold no advertising and produced no revenue. It is rumored that Twitter turned down an offer from Facebook to acquire the company for $500 million in Facebook company stock.[21] Twitter has been rumoured to carry a $250 Million dollar value by venture capitalists, according to a CNet report.[22]. On February 13, 2009, Twitter announced on their official blog[23] that they closed a third round of funding in which they secured more than 35 million dollars[24]

Privacy and security

A security vulnerability was reported on April 7 2007 by Nitesh Dhanjani & Rujith. The problem was due to Twitter's using the SMS message originator as the authentication of the user's account. Nitesh used fakemytext.com[3] to spoof a text message, whereupon Twitter posted the message on the victim's page. This vulnerability can only be used if the victim's phone number is known.[25] Twitter introduced an optional PIN that its users can specify to authenticate SMS-originating messages within a few weeks of this discovery.

On January 5, 2009, 33 high-profile Twitter accounts were compromised, and falsified messages—including sexually explicit and drug-related messages—were sent.[26][27] The accounts were compromised after a Twitter administrator's password was guessed via a dictionary attack.[28]

Technology

Users perpetually answer the question, "What are you doing?" Twitter is something like a web-based IRC client.[29] The Twitter web interface uses the Ruby on Rails framework.[30] From the spring of 2007 until sometime in 2008 the actual messages were handled by a pure-Ruby light-weight persistent queue server called Starling.[31][32] Starling was replaced in 2008 with Scarling, a light-weight persistent queue server written in the Scala programming language, which has since been renamed Kestrel.[33][34] The Twitter API itself allows the integration of Twitter with other web services and applications.[35]

In late April 2008, TechCrunch reported that, due to downtime related to scaling problems, Twitter would abandon Ruby on Rails as their web framework and start from scratch with PHP or Java.[36] Evan Williams, however, soon debunked this report in a Tweet he sent on May 1, 2008.[37]

Outages

Twitter experienced approximately 98% uptime in 2007, or about three full days of downtime.[38][39] Twitter's downtime was particularly noticeable during events popular with the technology industry, such as the 2008 Macworld Conference & Expo keynote address.[40][41] When Twitter crashes, users see the "fail whale" error message. Beluga whales are known as "canaries of the sea" due to their high-pitched twitter,[42] and the fail whale, created by Sydney artist and designer Yiying Lu,[43] is a whimsical illustration of red birds using nets to hoist a whale from the ocean.[44] The message reads: "Too many tweets! Please wait a moment and try again."[44] The fail whale has been featured on NPR.[16]

During May 2008 Twitter's new engineering team implemented necessary architectural changes to deal with the scale of growth. Stability issues resulted in down time or temporary feature removal.

As of August 2008, Twitter withdrew free SMS services to users in most of the world.[45]

For approximately five months, instant messaging support via a Jabber "bot" was listed as being "temporarily unavailable". [46] On October 10, 2008, Twitter's status blog announced that IM service was no longer a temporary outage and needed to be revamped. IM status is said to return at some point, but requires major work to be completed. [47]

Twitter service issues and resolutions can be tracked via their status page at http://status.twitter.com/.

In media

Twitter has been used as a "social justice tool" to connect groups of people in critical situations. On April 10, 2008, James Buck, a graduate journalism student at UC Berkeley, and his translator, Mohammed Maree, were arrested in Egypt for photographing an anti-government 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 contacted UC Berkeley, the US 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.[48][49]

Research reported in New Scientist in May 2008 [50] found that blogs, maps, photo sites and instant messaging systems like Twitter did a better job of getting information out during emergencies such as the shootings at Virginia Tech than either the traditional news media or government emergency services. The study — performed by researchers at the University of Colorado [disambiguation needed] — 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. Additionally, organizations that support relief efforts are also using Twitter. The American Red Cross uses Twitter (http://twitter.com/RedCross) to exchange minute-to-minute information about local disasters, including statistics and directions.[51][52] In October, 2008 a draft US Army intelligence report identified the popular micro-blogging service as a potential terrorist tool. The report said, "Twitter is already used by some members to post and/or support extremist ideologies and perspectives."[53][54] The first trades union Twitter service was launched by the news and campaigning website LabourStart in June 2008[55]

Some media outlets are also starting to use Twitter as a source of public sentiment on issues, and are using the technology in order to deliver real-time or recent-time opinions that are not sent to them directly. A specific example occurred during the CBC News television coverage of the Canadian federal election on October 14, 2008. During the broadcast, the CBC cited a graph (produced by the Infoscape Research Lab) of items mentioned on Twitter, along with Tweets regarding Elizabeth May and Stéphane Dion, the majority of the Dion Tweets calling for him to step down in response to the election results.[citation needed]

In 2008, CNN began setting up Twitter pages for some of its anchors and reading tweets during broadcasts. Rick Sanchez and Don Lemon prominently feature updates from Twitter followers during their broadcasts.

During the 2008 Mumbai attacks, eyewitnesses sent an estimated 80 tweets every five seconds as the tragedy unfolded. Twitter users on the ground helped in compiling a list of the dead and injured. In addition, users sent out vital information such as emergency phone numbers and the location of hospitals that needed blood donations. [56]

In January 2009, US Airways Flight 1549 experienced multiple bird strikes and had to be ditched in the Hudson River after takeoff from LaGuardia Airport in New York City. Janis Krum, a passenger on one of the ferries that rushed to help, took a picture of the downed plane as passengers were still evacuating and tweeted it via TwitPic before traditional media arrived at the scene.[57][58]

In February 2009, the Country Fire Authority used Twitter to send out regular alerts and updates regarding the 2009 Victorian bushfires.[59] 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.[60]

Similar services

A number of Twitter-like services exist, including sending text messages to multiple people at once.

Other services use a similar concept but add country-specific services or combine the micro-blogging facilities with other services, such as file sharing (e.g., Jaiku).

In May 2007, one source counted as many as 111 such "Twitter look-alikes" internationally.[61] Despite Twitter efforts to localize, Chinese-language Twitter clones have far outdone Twitter's own progress in China.[62]

Yammer, which launched at the TechCrunch 50 conference on September 8, 2008, is touted as an enterprise version of Twitter.

Prominent users

File:Twitter twitters page.JPG
A Twitter profile

See also

References

  1. ^ Opportunity Knocks, from the official Twitter Blog: Our relatively small team of 29 employees... (retrieved 14 feb. 2009)
  2. ^ Owyang, Jeremiah (November 19, 2008). "Social Networks Site Usage: Visitors, Members, Page Views, and Engagement by the Numbers in 2008". Retrieved 2009-02-16.
  3. ^ Kazeniac, Andy (February 9, 2009). "Social Networks: Facebook Takes Over Top Spot, Twitter Climbs". Compete.com. Retrieved 2009-02-17.
  4. ^ "HashTags.org". Retrieved 2009-02-07.
  5. ^ Glaser, Mark (May 17, 2007). "Twitter Founders Thrive on Micro-Blogging Constraints". Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Retrieved 2008-11-05.
  6. ^ Private Equity Week, 2006-10-30 {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |Year= ignored (|year= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ Williams, Evan (2007-04-16). "Twitter, Inc". Obvious. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
  8. ^ Stone, Biz (2007-03-14). "We Won!". Twitter. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
  9. ^ Strange, Adario (April 20, 2007). "Flickr Document Reveals Origin Of Twitter". Wired News. CondéNet. Retrieved 2008-11-05.
  10. ^ Stone, Biz (2007-04-18). "Incorporating Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
  11. ^ Miller, Claire Cain (October 20, 2008). "Popularity or Income? Two Sites Fight It Out". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-11-05.
  12. ^ TC articles on Summize acquisition
  13. ^ Stone, Biz (2008-04-22). "Twitter for Japan". Twitter. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
  14. ^ Niederberger Cabral, Ricardo (2008-09-10). "Language most spoken on Twitter". isnotworking.com. Retrieved 2008-09-11.
  15. ^ Crampton, Thomas (2008-05-23). "Joi Ito: Twitter makes money in Japan". ThomasCrampton.com. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  16. ^ a b The Bryant Park Project (July 3, 2008) NPR Twitter, What Are You Doing? Co-Founder Tells All.
  17. ^ Lavallee, Andrew (2007-03-16). "Friends Swap Twitters, and Frustration". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
  18. ^ Womack, Brian (November 12, 2008). "Twitter Shuns Venture-Capital Money as Startup Values Plunge". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2008-11-12.
  19. ^ Miller, Claire Cain (October 16, 2008). "Twitter Sidelines One Founder and Promotes Another". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-11-05.
  20. ^ Snyder, Bill (2008-03-31). "Twitter: Fanatical users help build the brand, but not revenue". The Industry Standard. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
  21. ^ Swisher, Kara (November 24, 2008). "When Twitter Met Facebook: The Acquisition Deal That Fail-Whaled". All Things Digital. Retrieved 2008-11-25.
  22. ^ "Report: VC infusion values Twitter at $250 million". Retrieved 2009-01-25. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |autor= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
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  24. ^ Twitter Raises $35 Million Series C From Benchmark and IVP, TechCrunch. Retrieved 13 feb. 2009
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  27. ^ Arrington, Michael (2009-01-05). "Celebrity Twitter Accounts Hacked (Bill O'Reilly, Britney Spears, Obama, More)". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2009-01-5. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
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  30. ^ Kenzer, Josh (2007-03-29). "5 Question Interview with Twitter Developer Alex Payne". Radical Behavior. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
  31. ^ Payne, Alex (2008-01-16). "Announcing Starling". Twitter. Retrieved 2009-01-11.
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  35. ^ "API Documentation". Google Groups. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
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  44. ^ a b Whyte, Murray. (June 1, 2008) Tweet, tweet there's been an earthquake; How an online social network chirpily called Twitter is becoming anything but trivial, Toronto Star
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  72. ^ http://twitter.com/DowningStreet
  73. ^ Stephanie Busari (2008-11-27). "Tweeting the terror: How social media reacted to Mumbai". CNN.
  74. ^ Minister Verhagen: “Voorlopig ga ik door met twitteren” (Frankwatching, 24/11/2008, visited 13/02/2009
  75. ^ "Twitter / GTComputing" (in Englisch). Twitter. 2008-11-08. Retrieved 2008-11-08. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |month= and |coauthors= (help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
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  77. ^ Burger, Christoph (2009-02-18). "Using Web 2.0 application Twitter for formative course evaluation: a case study" (in Englisch). 1st Mobile phone conference, London (UK). Retrieved 2009-02-18. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help); More than one of |author= and |last= specified (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  78. ^ Burger, Christoph (2009-01-07). "Let's go formative: Continuous student ratings with Web 2.0 application Twitter". GOR09. Retrieved 2009-01-07. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help); More than one of |author= and |last= specified (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)