Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Anything you quote from Twitter is always out of context

Friday, March 6th, 2009

Brian Kelly posted Twitter Can Pimp Up Your Stuff – But Should It? a while ago. This post has caused me to think about courtesy and good practice. The aspect I want to talk about is Brian’s reporting of a conversation which took place on Twitter. I’m writing this to make a general point, not as a personal criticism of Brian who has well-established credentials as an experimenter with these technologies and who I know, from talking to him directly, is interested in these issues.

The point is this: I tend to think that the quoting of Twitter exchanges in blog posts is something to be done sparingly, if at all, and has all kinds of potential for misunderstanding. I think there is some evidence of this occurring in Brian’s post.

Twitter has a very basic model for threaded discussions and this is not honoured by many clients (many users I follow clearly use more than one client, as do I). Importantly, as a user, you do not necessarily know who else is involved in the exchange – other users may be responding to remarks made by still more users about whom you are unaware.

When a Twitter dialogue is presented out of the context of Twitter, this is potentially misleading. The conversation which the person posting the dialogue reports is not the same as the dialogue whcih each individual contributer has participated in. And, importantly, they may be responding to a point which has been made but which the blogger, and the readers, never see. We are reporting our version of a conversation conducted in a crowded pub, involving people we half know and people we don’t know at all.

In the comments, Paul Boag says:

I think the problem is that because twitter is new, we all see it as playing a different role. You could argue twitter is a place for sharing personal experience. You could argue it is the place where you post ‘what you are doing’ (the original intention). Or you could argue it is a place to have a dialogue with your followers. All are valid as are many other uses. Ultimately it comes down to personal choice.

Quite so. Paul goes on to say:

People should use twitter as they want and others should stop criticising them for it. If they don’t like it they should stop following.

This is in the context of a response to a tweet by someone else, reported in the main body of his post. I don’t imagine the person who made this short comment to their network on Twitter did so in the expectation that their words might be used in this way. Now that people in my particular peer-network realise that anything they say in that wonderful, peculiar space that is Twitter might be lifted and repeated, very likely out of context, on a blog, I wonder if this will gradually stifle the free-flowing, relaxed conversations which spring up there. It is almost inevitable that people would be misrepresented in this way. Going back to that pub, would we, for example, speak as freely if someone was standing there with an audio recorder, waiting for something juicy to copy and paste into their podcast? Going back to Paul’s comment, I think he misunderstood the reported remark – but the lifting out of context has probably been partly responsible for this, and has left no obvious channel for a response.

‘Exchanges’ of Tweets can start and finish in a matter of minutes. I tend to take time over a blog post, marshalling arguments, checking references, re-reading for tone to avoid offending people unnecessarily etc. I take much less care with tweets, because I expect them to be taken much less seriously. Now I do understand that tweets are, for the most part, on public record, on the Web. I think this is mostly beside the point. It’s how we use the thing which counts, and how we expect it to be used. I think a Twitter which consisted only of quotable statements of verifiable fact or carefully thought through arguments would become, in Brian’s own words:

a sterile environment [which] could well lead to a killing of the golden goose

People may not expect their Tweets to be taken as seriously as something they might write in a blog. I certainly don’t. Of course, we know that most of our Twitter output is public – that’s part of the point of it. Many conversations happen in near-real-time: this gives Twitter a dynamic ‘edge’, where people can respond to topics with an off-the-cuff response. Of course not every Twitter exchange is like this – the point is the expectations about how seriously one’s Tweets will be taken is difficult to anticipate but should, I suggest, default to ‘not necessarily’. Clearly, we have different levels of discourse. We probably wouldn’t want to quote ‘tweets’ in academic papers…. would we? And yet I wouldn’t hesitate to quote a blog post in a paper.

There are some who do use Twitter as a micro-blogging platform. For example, Paul Boag is a highly successful broadcaster, with many followers in several media-spaces (Twitter, blog, podcast). Gaining and expanding an audience is important to him, as it is for many people. (Paul has even written a guide to broadcasting and responding to followers in Twitter). However, I suggest, tentatively, that a predilection for gaining followers obscures the fact that others don’t really think this way, and value Twitter for very different reasons. Where one person welcomes any exposure on any platform, another might be disconcerted by suddenly finding their throw-away 140 characters appearing on someone’s blog.

I note today that Brian has used a set of Twitter exchanges on another post. I would suggest that at least one of the tweets featured there was not something the author would necessarily have wanted to be broadcast more widely.

As a matter of courtesy I would ask believe people should consider carefully before quoting tweets in their blog. I hope it doesn’t become common practice for bloggers to treat Twitter as a cheap and easy source of (sometimes provocative) material.

Again, I want to make it clear that this should not be viewed as a personal criticism of Brian, or his blog. It is only by doing these things that such issues can be revealed and discussed. However, we have to be able to realise what doesn’t work, and to recognise the possible consequences of the practices we necessarily are evolving through trial and error.

Destination, or workflow component?

Saturday, April 19th, 2008

In a recent post, Facebook Or Twitter – Or Facebook And Twitter , Brian Kelly says:

…in some circle such use of Facebook is being derided with comments such as “It’s a closed garden“, “Its popularity is on the wane” or “Twitter is a better development environment” being made. I have to say that I foind that such comments tend to miss the point.“.

Brian tackles the “popularity on the wane” comment with some web statistics, but leaves the “closed garden” and “better development environment” arguments. I’m not at all sure what the argument is about development environments, but I am very interested in the walled garden aspect – I wrote about this in July last year, and I have seen nothing since to change my mind. I’m not sure I’m deriding Facebook, but I do maintain that it is a walled garden. I still keep an account in Facebook out of interest but I rarely access it.

I attended a session on digital libraries earlier this week at the JISC conference, at which Lorcan Dempsey spoke about how where once the user built their workflow around the library, now the library must build services which fit into the user’s workflow. Facebook, it seems to me, is a destination. I go there sometimes, almost always because someone has uploaded some photos of an event I have attended. I go there for occasional amusement. According to the figures, Facebook is very successful at being a destination. But is it embedded in anyone’s workflow I wonder? Twitter is very much part of my workflow – it is the single most used application on my iPhone.

Twitter is an eminently ‘composable‘ service by design, while Facebook is an attractive (for many) destination. Twitter participates in any number of mashups, and has, given rise to an extraordinary range of user-interfaces. It fits into people’s workflows because they can choose how to access it. I use a combination of the mobile web interface and SMS: others use these and a variety of rich desktop interfaces.

So I think my response is still: use Twitter and Facebook, or both, or neither. But I believe that Twitter is more interesting, really because it’s composable nature will allow it to fit all kinds of workflows.

Your mileage may vary :-)

Twittering about Facebook Fatigue

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

The headline to Guy Dixon’s post on vnunet.com is “Facebook user numbers fall in the UK”. The sub-title is: “Social networking fatigue sets in at last”.

I don’t think the one follows the other. I think that what we are really seeing is simply Facebook Fatigue.

I felt the first effects of Facebook Fatigue months ago and stopped actively using it although I still respond to the alerts that it sends me about people communicating with me in some way. I wouldn’t want to be rude!

When Facebook announced their platform which would allow third parties to deploy applications within the Facebook environment, I was momentarily interested, until I had a closer look, and concluded:

I just can’t get all that excited about facebook as a platform. From my point of view, in an exciting era of mashups, facebook is only seriously mashable in one direction, and it’s the wrong direction. If facebook’s social networks were exposed to the web, ‘mine-able’ and mashable – now that would be exciting.

I have yet to see a compelling use of Facebook’s platform. Very quickly, during the period I actually used Facebook, I decided that the only value it offered me was the status and news updates provided by my ‘Facebook friends’. The RSS output facility for these allowed me follow them without having to log in to the application proper. Of course, this relegated me to the status of ‘lurker‘ but I was already getting bored with the thing anyway.

I was actually alerted to the possibility of more widespread Facebook Fatigue by someone ‘tweeting’ about it on Twitter. Twitter is, from my point of view, interesting in all the ways that Facebook just isn’t. From one point of view, Twitter provides the social network and ’status updates’ functionality of Facebook, and nothing else. Importantly, it does so in an open way – it has a very good (and simple) API which has allowed a number of applications which use Twitter to spring up already. Where everything developed for the Facebook platform is only usable within Facebook itself, Twitter-based applications can be deployed anywhere.

I’m a fan of Twitter. It took me a while to ‘get it’, but now it is becoming increasingly useful to me. It’s my virtual ‘water-cooler’, where I catch up on the gossip in my network. It’s my alerting system for breaking news. It’s agile – I can easily start/stop following people. Now I can do the same to ‘tags’ – if I get interested in something, I’ll follow it for a while, then stop. By embracing the constraint of the 140 character limit per post, we get a very different communication channel – one which seems to fit a need for an increasing number of people. Where my network on Facebook peaked to a plateau quite early on, on Twitter I’m gaining new contacts frequently.

Facebook has failed (so far) to get embedded, in systems, workflow or practice on a large scale. Given it’s massive user-base, this is interesting. Facebook seems to want to be the destination, and the only destination. Twitter is already both destination and component – I now habitually turn to Facebook to see what my network thinks about the latest news for example, and have already started roughing up application which could use Twitter to add to my ‘finely-tuned antennae‘.

If you haven’t already, give Twitter a try.

Social networking fatigue? We’re only just warming up!