I stopped development on my Twitter app a year after realizing that the twitter API was not yet stable enough to allow an individual developer to create a stable product. I continue to follow the exchange between developers and Twitter as much for entertainment as to keep track. Twitter understands the eco-system that is evolving no better than the rest of us but it still wants to control and direct the evolution. Each bit of control it exerts trims off branches of evolution that do not support the main stem. By cutting off branches twitter is possibly denying the evolution of future success.
Hey! How are you doing?
We read your post on “Twitter Development Talk” ‘Google Group’. You are right that, developing a twitter app individually is a very hard work. Or, in crux, it’s really impossible.
But, please don’t give up. If you still like to create the twitter app or want to help in the development work, then you have the option to join us!
We, Steel Sendras Group, is an organization providing various non-profit & for-profit services worldwide. And, recently, we want to develop a really cool, efficient, smart, reliable twitter app along with other softwares. So, you can come on board.
We are a community of people working together to make the web a better place.
If you think it’s a spam, then please feel free to contact us.
Cheers..
Steel Sendras Group
Follow us on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/SteelSendras
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11:56:00
Thanks for writing the clarification. It sounds as if the intent of
the ban is to prevent anyone from emulating and distributing a stream
of Twitter data to Twitter mobile/web/desktop clients and inserting
ads into it. Tweets posted in individual accounts by account owners
or by proxies/3rd parties on behalf of the account owners are still
allowed.
The blog post did not suggest that this was the case, nor did most of
the press about the subject (as mentioned earlier in this thread).
Your post clears this up a lot.
Apologies to Dick
On May 24, 10:28 pm, Ryan Sarver <rsar...@twitter.com> wrote:
> I want to make sure this part is clear -- this policy change isn't meant to
> say that we are going to start policing if the content of something a user
> tweets is an ad or not. The policy change affects 3rd party services that
> were putting ads in the middle of a timeline.
>
> So if Liz is paid by Reebok to tweet about how much she loves their new
> shoes, we are not going to be policing that any more than we were on Friday.
> This policy also *does not prohibit* services like Ad.ly that help
> facilitate those relationships or even help her post the ads to her timeline
> on her behalf.
>
> It *does prohibit* an application from calling out to a service to find an
Honestly my opinion is that it's Twitters rights to change the rules as they go - it's their network and their right to do so, but it's also my right as an investor in application development to not invest any more time or money on Twitter until they bring in a management layer that has experience I building ecosystems and knows how to encourage sustainable development.
Can you imagine if salesforce pulled a stunt like this?
Cheers,
Dean
> -----Original Message-----
> From: twitter-deve...@googlegroups.com [mailto:twitter-development-
> ta...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dewald Pretorius
> Sent: Monday, 24 May 2010 9:27 PM
> To: Twitter Development Talk
> Subject: [twitter-dev] Re: TWITTER BANS 3rd PARTY ADVERTISING
>
At first I was happy that the service I work on was not banned by this
ToS change. Even though we use twitter data for monetisation, we don't
insert data into timelines.
However, when I look at the services that have now been banned, I
can't see any warning signs other than that they were competing with
Twitter for monetising their data. This is what my service does. Even
though it's not currently banned, doesn't it make sense to abandon
development now? The best I can hope for it that it *isn't* wildly
successful, so Twitter doesn't consider it competition...
Every time I read Twitter's explanation for the situation, it reads as
"we know our monetisation strategy can't compete with third parties in
the short term, so we're banning all competition". Hardly conducive to
fostering the best solutions, particularly when Twitter will always
have the upper hand with their "official" monetisation platform and
analytics for resonance, anyway. What's even worse is the the new ToS
is *still* completely ambiguous. Until I saw Peter's post here I had
no idea that the ban was only in the publishing end, not insertion.
Of course all this makes sense from Twitter's perspective, but for
third parties... that just leaves us on an ever changing playing field
with invisible goals. I could have lived with rules and rev share
additions, but completely banning competition... not so much.
Concerned.
James
PS what's the point of this paragraph from the blog post? "We
understand that for a few of these companies, the new Terms of Service
prohibit activities in which they’ve invested time and money. We will
continue to move as quickly as we can to deliver the Annotations
capability to the market so that developers everywhere can create
innovative new business solutions on the growing Twitter platform." a
slap in the face? We understand that we've wasted your time and money,
so here's the next thing for you to waste time and money on. No
guarantees, no apologies.
We recently updated our Advertising FAQ to answer many of the
questions that you may have. http://bit.ly/twitter-ad-faq
Taylor
On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 9:15 AM, Liz <nwjer...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I hope some answers are forthcoming, James. Twitter doesn't seem very
> talkative.
>
Read this part of that FAQ: "Paid Tweets injected into any timeline on
a service that leverages the Twitter API (other than Promoted Tweets).
This applies to any Twitter stream, whether user based, search based,
or other."
Do you realize how confusing that is?
1) Does it mean I can publish a paid tweet via the API? (I know I can,
but someone who just reads the FAQ won't be able to figure that out.)
2) Does it mean I can inject "tweets" into any displayed timeline, as
long as they are not "paid tweets"? If so, it means I can insert
entries that look exactly like tweets, except they did not come from
Twitter and they contain my affiliate link.
You guys really need to sit down and read all these things through the
eyes of people who are not privy to your internal discussions,
decisions, and understanding of the matter. And then write your TOS
and FAQs so that everyone can understand them.
On May 26, 1:20 pm, Taylor Singletary <taylorsinglet...@twitter.com>
wrote:
> Hello Everyone,
>
> We recently updated our Advertising FAQ to answer many of the
> questions that you may have.http://bit.ly/twitter-ad-faq
I unfortunately don't have answers for you beyond what's presented in
the FAQ and the Terms of Service.
Taylor
Also, you say "We don't seek to control what users Tweet" but that's
exactly what you are doing by preventing users from Tweeting
advertisement should they wish to. I know you can set whatever rules
you like regardless of how they affect people or developers but don't
make a ban on using Tweets for certain kinds of content and then say
that you're not trying to control the content. Clearly, that is what
you're doing. That's what a ban is, exerting your control over
content. In my opinion, you've picked the wrong target.
I'm also not sure how "paid Tweets" by individual users is any
different from commercial/organization accounts using Twitter to offer
discounts, specials, sales, etc. Why does the advertising ban apply to
individuals and not to companies?
Liz Pullen
Seem suspect you don't want to be nailed down in a google cache on the
specifics?
Regards,
Dean Collins
Cognation Inc
de...@cognation.net
+1-212-203-4357 New York
+61-2-9016-5642 (Sydney in-dial).
+44-20-3129-6001 (London in-dial).
> -----Original Message-----
> From: twitter-deve...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:twitter-development-
Perhaps you should ask someone to add the http://bit.ly/twitter-ad-faq
link as a further reading reference into the "2. Advertising Around
Twitter Content" section of the API TOS.
Stuff is very fragmented at the moment, and you have to accidentally
discover pages on separate domains just to get the full picture.
The same goes for further reading on other sections of the API TOS as
well.
On May 26, 1:20 pm, Taylor Singletary <taylorsinglet...@twitter.com>
wrote:
> Hello Everyone,
>
> We recently updated our Advertising FAQ to answer many of the
> questions that you may have.http://bit.ly/twitter-ad-faq
Dean: The link to the support center FAQ on this topic is very clumsy
and long; there are still a number of email clients out there that
don't handle long links very well, besides the convenience of having a
single URL that I can memorize easily when pointing it out to folks.
For those concerned about URL shortening, you can access that FAQ at
http://support.twitter.com/groups/35-business/topics/127-frequently-asked-questions/articles/142161-advertisers#20100525
Taylor Singletary
Developer Advocate, Twitter
http://twitter.com/episod
I'm glad Twitter thought to do this, but it still doesn't explain as
clearly as Ryan's post here about what's acceptable and what's not.
Not Acceptable:
"Paid Tweets injected into any timeline on a service that leverages
the Twitter API (other than Promoted Tweets). This applies to any
Twitter stream, whether user based, search based, or other."
This makes it sound like Ryan was wrong, and actually confuses the
issue again.
From Ryan:
"This policy also *does not prohibit* services like Ad.ly that help
facilitate those relationships or even help her post the ads to her
timeline
on her behalf. "
These sound like they are conflicting. Is Ryan correct, or not?
What would also be helpful is a link to information on how the
Promoted Tweets rev share works.
On May 26, 9:20 am, Taylor Singletary <taylorsinglet...@twitter.com>
wrote:
> Hello Everyone,
>
> We recently updated our Advertising FAQ to answer many of the
> questions that you may have.http://bit.ly/twitter-ad-faq
>
> Taylor
I think the word "injected" is causing the confusion. As I understand
it it means:
- I pull a list of tweets from the API into an array.
- Before displaying the list to the user, I "inject" entries that look
like tweets (but are actually entries I get paid to display) into that
array.
- Then I display the list to the user making it look as if everything
in the list came from Twitter.
As I said, that's how I understand it. But with that understanding, it
does not make sense why Dick was going on about the infrastructure
cost of Twitter, because this injection does not impact Twitter's
infrastructure at all. It all happens exclusively on the application's
server or the desktop or mobile device.
Anyway, hopefully at some point in time there will be an authoritative
and unambiguous explanation from Twitter.