I'm in the middle of a release push for the Social Media Analytics Research Toolkit. If the thing is still around when I get that done, I'll take up cudgels and pitchforks and torches, assuming RWW, Mashable and Techcrunch haven't ground it into the soil by then. ;-)

--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky
http://borasky-research.net http://twitter.com/znmeb

"A mathematician is a device for turning coffee into theorems." - Paul Erdos


Quoting Scott Wilcox <sc...@dor.ky>:

Do it, do it, do it!

teehee!

On 17 Aug 2010, at 19:42, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:

I'm seriously considering a blog post about it - someone talk me out of it!

--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky
http://borasky-research.net http://twitter.com/znmeb

"A mathematician is a device for turning coffee into theorems." - Paul Erdos


Quoting Tom van der Woerdt <i...@tvdw.eu>:

I have a feeling that I know which app you are talking about - my
timeline is also flooded with tweets from that app.

Tom


On 8/17/10 8:28 PM, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
Yeah, that thing bit me too - I deleted the tweet it sent. There *is* a
warning on the page that it will send the tweet, though. I think the
Twitterverse will jump on him and he'll pull it down.

--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky
http://borasky-research.net http://twitter.com/znmeb

"A mathematician is a device for turning coffee into theorems." - Paul
Erdos


Quoting Taylor Singletary <taylorsinglet...@twitter.com>:

Principle #1 of the Twitter Platform is: "Don't Surprise Users." --
And this
type of activity does exactly that and is therefore against the spirit of
the developer guidelines. http://dev.twitter.com/api_terms

You can report misbehaving applications at:
http://twitter.com/help/escalate

Taylor

On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 7:21 AM, Tom van der Woerdt <i...@tvdw.eu> wrote:

> Is there anything in the terms of use about best practice for auto-
> tweeting?
Go find out? http://twitter.com/tos

> I refer to the irritating practice an app automatically tweeting a
> viral message from your account when you authenticate. e.g. "I just
> got 50% somethingfactor on somelameapp.com, what's yours?"
As far as I know, that is not forbidden, as long as the application
explicitly mentions that the application will post a tweet.

> It should be against the terms of use to do this without the *minimum*
> of a warning message, e.g. "logging in will send a tweet from your
> account" - best practice would be an opt-in checkbox or some such UI.
Like I said

> There needs to be a way for applications to be reported for doing
this.
I agree.




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