Have you tried contacting twitter support directly? In the first instance, it's likely that you were reported by someone who saw it and took offense to it.
As for having tweets reported for spam, it could have been a competitor (and that type of reporting is easy to automate). But the Twitter spam algorithm could also have interpreted the [short tweet length + link + popular hashtag] as being spam. From a merchant perspective, we kind of operate at her majesty's pleasure. By that I mean that social networks make the rules, enforce them (or not), and our only real recourse is to move to another, less populated social network. I'd recommend talking to twitter support before totally writing it off, but you might not get a resolution for the reasons mentioned above. Best, Griffin Boyce @abditum On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 8:42 PM, Uncle Zzzen <unclezz...@gmail.com> wrote: > Warning for the politically-correct: this message contains the N-word. I > believe it is in context :) -- "I believe that usability is a security concern; systems that do not pay close attention to the human interaction factors involved risk failing to provide security by failing to attract users." ~Len Sassaman PGP Key etc: https://www.noisebridge.net/wiki/User:Fontaine
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