Just received an email titled "Twitter Apps and You." In the email,
Twitter says that "when you click on [t.co] links from Twitter.com or
a Twitter application, Twitter will log that click. We hope to use
this data to provide better and more relevant content to you over
time."
Any idea if Twitter
Different question on the same email that states that Twitter will
start tracking every t.co click, whether on twitter.com or a Twitter
app. Does anyone know if Twitter will update their API to allow us to
get the Twitter Update ID that referred a particular click?
Thanks,
Boaz
On Sep 1, 8:34
Just to clarify: I am testing with unauthenticated calls
On Aug 23, 5:17 pm, boaz wrote:
> Hello everyone,
>
> I checked the behavior on an AWS instance _without_ static IP (which
> is called by Amazon elastic IP) and I do not see any problem with the
> limits. The "limit
ny behvior
where my limits are affected by other users with which I share the
resource.
Am I missing something? Could it be just a matter of luck/random
behavior?
Thank you,
Boaz
On Aug 22, 12:03 am, "Darren Bounds (Cliqset)"
wrote:
> Hello Chad,
>
> Can you confirm that this is not
plicitly spell out how it actually works?
>
> Boaz - as the thread Srikanth referenced states, official word from
> Twitter is that you get 20,000 calls per hour *per user* from your
> whitelisted IP. (Of course, it's not that cut and dried - POSTs are
> different than GETs are d
ith the relevant end user as the twitter authenticated user, I
can do 200*150=3 API calls in one hours without whitelisting the
IP address, which is more than the 2 I could do with whitelisting.
Can anyone give a counter example where whitelisting is absolutely
necessary?
Thank you,
Boaz