Yep, this "we can blacklist an app for any other reason as we deem fit," stuff is fine but don't expect other 3rd party developers to play along.
I've been trying to get an "exact number of people you can delete from a following" in 24 hours without risking your twitter account from the tech support team following the suspension of my @LiveNFLchat account, no one seems to know/be prepared to state a number. We're happy to play by the rules, just spell out what those rules clearly are. Regards, Dean Collins Live Chat Concepts Inc d...@livechatconcepts.com +1-212-203-4357 New York +61-2-9016-5642 (Sydney in-dial). +44-20-3129-6001 (London in-dial). -----Original Message----- From: twitter-development-talk@googlegroups.com [mailto:twitter-development-t...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dewald Pretorius Sent: Friday, September 11, 2009 8:43 AM To: Twitter Development Talk Subject: [twitter-dev] Re: Draft: Twitter Rules for API Use I guess the lawyers wrote this draft as an extension of the modified Twitter TOS. Alex, you will need to jump on this draft from a dizzy height and get all your Platform rules in there. Once the API Rules are published as "The Rules" you will have no grounds to blacklist an application for other than what is written in "The Rules". Unless the rules also state that, "we can blacklist an app for any other reason as we deem fit," which will fly like a lead balloon. If the rules are not clear and comprehensive, they will become a ball and chain around the ankles of the Platform team. Dewald