Tagged with twitter

The Daily Blot: Does Twitter have its own running order?

Earlier this week, a Twitter rage erupted over comments made by David Cameron concerning the UK film industry. The Prime Minister wants film funding to focus on helping films that have mainstream potential. Film-makers, cinema-goers and film critics all lined up to take a swipe at Cameron and Twitter was awash with people protesting at the perceived arrogance of the PM to decide what is right for the UK film industry.

However, this isn’t a new idea from the PM. Way back in November 2010 Cameron hinted this grand plan in Prime Minister’s questions. It was in response to a question by Richard Harrington, the Tory MP for Watford, whose constituency is the home of Leavesden Studios – the home of the Harry Potter films, then recently bought by Warner Bros.

Read the rest of this over at The Daily Blot.

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China’s attempts to create a “healthy internet”

In China, a battle has been waged for some time as the government try to clamp down on social networks. A senior official even went to the headquarters of Sina, the biggest social network in the country, to ask them to prevent the spread of “toxic rumours”. There was growing cynicism that the government’s attempts to crack down on ‘rumours’might be a little bit more than creating a “healthy internet”. According to Reuters, one user said in August:

If this was really about quashing rumours, Internet users would surely welcome that, but I fear that this is not about mere rumours. It’s more about waving this banner as a pretext to cleanse so-called rumours and ban the people from telling the truth.

Despite these fears, Sina have just recently started to put into place some methods to try and cleanse the social network of information that could be a cause for concern. A ‘rumour control’team has been set up recently and there’s, according to The Next Web, about ten members of that team watching activity on a round-the-clock basis. Their role is to issue warnings to users that they think have crossed the line and they also have the power to suspend and delete accounts. Tan Chao, director of the rumour control team, told China Daily:

The job is vital, as we want to protect the truth and maintain an unpolluted Web. There is a lot of information on Weibo, much of it eye-catching, which means it attracts a lot of people. Yet users are not always good at judging what is true and what is false. They can be easily misled.

Could you imagine Twitter implementing similar measures on their service based on the request of a UK government? Given that one of the ideas mentioned in the wake of the UK was a shutdown of social networks to stop people from communicating at times of social unrest, the answer probably isn’t clear-cut as you might think.

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Open response to ‘Blogging & tweeting as second-class art forms’

Early this morning – very early – Amanda Palmer posted an interesting blog on blogging itself and tweeting as secondary art forms and went into really good detail about why. It’s a really good read and if you have ten minutes spare you should do so. Actually, do it now. I can wait…

Done? Ace.

I tweeted her earlier this afternoon:

My tweet to AFP

I got a reply:

AFP's reply

So here I am, blogging a response to another blog.

Continue reading

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The week that Twitter got serious

Twitter

Been a quiet week hasn’t it?

Well, actually it hasn’t. This was the week that has proved Twitter is not just a new social media fad. In the matter of a few days we’ve had the Trafigura scandal and we had yesterday’s unbelievable and appalling article by Jan Moir about the tragic death of Stephen Gately. Because of it, people using it to spread the word about Trafigura, the blocked information became public. Because of it, the Daily Mail has lost advertisers on their website. I joined Twitter in 2007 in its embryonic phases and even I didn’t expect that it would get this big and this valuable to news.

What’s perhaps worrying for organisations like Carter-Ruck and the Daily Mail is that the momentum is not going to go away. Twitter is no so powerful that it could pretty much create news at any given moments. A world without it would mean that both Trafigura and the Jan Noir article would not have been news. There is also an added legal benefit. As Martin Moore says in his blog yesterday, to stop the people tweeting away is an impossible task:

They (or rather ‘we’, since I twitter and was twittering on Tuesday morning) are mostly individuals, not institutions or outlets. To stop twitterers Carter Ruck would have to take on thousands of individuals – many of whom are tweeting pseudonymously. To use a military analogy, it’s like an army fighting a guerilla rather than a conventional war.

People must stop underestimating this invaluable tool. People who think that incidents like this are examples of a ‘heavily orchestrated internet campaign’– something than Jan Moir believed the furore was in her forced and non-heartfelt ‘apology’– are obviously deluded and will never ‘get’the idea in the first place and will suffer for it. Just like the Daily Mail.

PS – If you haven’t yet, read Charlie Brooker’s utter destroying of the Moir article.

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Will social networking eat itself?

LOLbook

Social networking. If anything has become big in terms of mass global success in the later half of this decade it is social networking. Whether you’re trying to de-tag yourself from painfully embarrassing photos from a night out, blogging about your emo woes, or telling the world what you think in 140 characters or less there are now several ways that people can organise their own lives online. The power of these services are certainly similar to that of a great destroyer – websites like Friends Reunited are declining in popularity due to the fact that people could get the same service for free on Facebook rather than having to pay.

But in the last three years something interesting has happened. In 2007, a year after the entire world went crazy for MySpace, Facebook was starting to make waves with the status updates, cleaner interface and much more in the way of actual networking. As a result, MySpace had to react and they instead copied everything that made Facebook really good. Facebook was on a roll until early this year when Twitter exploded thanks to a certain Stephen Fry and recently Facebook had to retaliate to keep people using it. How? By copying Twitter entirely. Soon, MySpace will copy those features that are now to be found on Facebook. Basically, social networks have become a chain where once something new and exciting pops up, the old services that were once the same thing will copy them.

Basically, what I’m trying to say is that social networking is eating itself. It’s difficult to predict the future in the world of technology where every second will see something new develop. However, one can’t help but imagine what new social networking trend will emerge next and, perhaps more importantly, how other social networking services will try to make the most of it. There is a great skit on the brilliant The Day Today where they run through fake TV listings and mention an off-the-wall documentary that follows a family in their daily lives via cameras inserted right into the face of each family member. I think someday in the near future we will have that reality and what’s more, in keeping with the Web 2.0 theme, it will be a social networking site. Think YouTube but live streamed – just think of the number of things you could sneakily watch! If someone is reading this and wants to make it work, get in touch so that we can talk about finance…

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