Recurring Tweets On Twitter Accounts Are Being Discontinued

Social Oomph

Social Oomph

On Monday, October 12th, 2009, Twitter communicated that recurring tweets are in violation of their Terms of Service. Twitter’s rationale centered around the potential for recurring tweets to result in duplicate tweets.

From Twitter … Recurring Tweets are a violation no matter how they are done, including whether or not someone pays you to have a special privilege. We don’t want to see any duplicate tweets whatsoever- They pollute Twitter, and tools shouldn’t be given to enable people to break the rules. Spinnable text seems to just be a way to bypass the rules against duplicate updates and essentially provides the same problems.

For those of you using services such as Social Oomph (previously named Tweetlater), you can still schedule tweets for a specific day/time, just not recurring Tweets. We’re still awaiting further definition from Twitter as to what constitutes a recurring Tweet. Exact same, or similar?

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About Michael Gass

Consultant | Trainer | Author | Speaker

Since 2007, he has been pioneering the use of social media, inbound and content marketing strategies specifically for agency new business.

He is the founder of Fuel Lines Business Development, LLC, a firm which provides business development training and consulting services to advertising, digital, media and PR agencies.

Comments

  1. Twitter has really dropped the ball this time. This is just the kind of move that will cause people to leave this service. There have been a series of egregious actions against the development and user community by Twitter and this is just one more. It is akin to censorship. What about all those people who have spent thousands and thousands of hours and 10’s of thousands of dollars building software applications to automate business communications through Twitter.

    There are just so many things wrong with this decision that I can’t even finish my thoughts.

    Its a sad day.

  2. I agree with steve. Bad move by Twitter. I’m checking out identica & facebook to transition away from Twitter.

    Miley Cyrus was right

  3. Worse than censoring individual tweets, Twitter is already censoring individual tweeters.

    You can easily and quickly find out who, what or which tweets are being censored by Twitter.

    To see WHO Twitter Is censoring – Search for the user’s name in Twitter Search. If that user only show ups in RTs, THEY ARE BEING CENSORED from Twitter Search and therefore from the Twitter Timeline.

    You can also use this same method to see if Twitter is censoring YOU: Tweet then look for yourself in Twitter Search. If your tweet (or you) can not be found, or If you (or that tweet) only show up in RTs, YOU ARE BEING CENSORED from Twitter Search and therefore from the Twitter Timeline.

    The question is: Where does it stop? And who is doing the deciding? Is it arbitrary, computerized, or is an individual(s) making these censorship decisions?

    So is Twitter behaving any differently from Iran or China?

  4. By: Jim Goldman
    CNBC Silicon Valley Bureau Chief

    Has the sun begun to set on Twitter? Has its finest moments faded into the past?

    Twitter
    AP
    It’s probably too soon to sing the company’s death knell, but there are disturbing trends afoot that suggest times are getting increasingly tougher for the nano-blogging site trying so hard to maintain some sense of relevance.

    The latest metrics from comScore paint a rough picture for Twitter: Americans using the site decline 7.9 percent in October, compared to September, signaling the second monthly decline for the site in 2009. Yes, the site still boasts 19.2 million users, but the company’s growth of less than 1 percent in September, and an actual decline tracked in August is a real problem.

    Why? Because even during the dot com bubble Web sites like Pets.com and Webvan and so many others that litter the Silicon Valley graveyard found ways to create at least the appearance of growth. Instead, Twitter continues to drift through the marketplace like a dandelion seed, going where the winds of trend and word-of-mouth and hype take it.

    We’ve certainly seen some interesting deals involving Twitter. Sharing data with Google [GOOG 570.11 2.26 (+0.4%) ] is intriguing, and TV commercial I saw on our air earlier this morning from mattress maker Tempur-Pedic directing potential customers to Twitter might hold promise, but is that it? Really?

    Twitter runs the risk of devolving into another marketing tool by companies looking for what might seem like a cool way to speak to customers. But if that’s all it is, I’m not sure how many customers will be left to hear the message. And where’s the beef? Where’s this company’s revenue-generation strategy, or Heaven forbid, profits?

    I don’t argue that Twitter has a big base of users. I just wonder how many of those 19 million are passionate enough about the service to stick with it beyond its initial attraction as a curiosity. And how many of those 19 million are going to spend some hard-earned scratch on the service, or on those who advertise with it or market through it.

    Also, new rounds of venture capital funding do not equal “revenue” growth.

    I don’t know, but it seems as though Twitter is running the serious risk of so many dot com deaths that came before it: Trying to identify a market for its service after it’s already in business, rather than identifying an unmet market need and going after it.

    The decline in Twitter usage is more than an irrelevant data point as a kind of snap shot of today’s activity without deeper ramifications. The comScore data about Twitter should be watched very carefully, and taken very seriously. I’m not sure how long these guys can last as an independent entity and with numbers like these, its valuation will now be under serious pressure.

    Shhhhhh, listen: Here that hissing noise?

  5. Twitter seems to be following the governments of the world these days who are engaged in over-regulating innovative businesses out of business. Regulation by a supposed innovative company shows how far down Silicon Valley has come from the glory days of the 70s. I find it ironic that a co. that would like to be seen as innovative is regulating its users innovative use of service. Not to mention changing the rules of use mid-game manifests total lack of respect for users who spent countless hours getting their steams to serve. The dot bomb days were all about engineers running the asylum without regard for product management. Twiiter is following the path to bombing out in one big bankruptcy – Twitter is officially on death watch.

  6. To effectively use Twitter for marketing, without having to spend all your time on Twitter, it’s required to set up a system. An good system that builds your Twitter following will turn you as an authority in your niche, and will effectively promote your product, service, business.

  7. Thanks for the information but there are still some ways to do that like the one we are using:
    http://codingmall.com/products-mainmenu-8/95-joomla-recurring-tweets

    You can even run your own recurring tweet service with that.

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