[Air-L] Academic replacements for TwapperKeeper.com?

Jean Burgess je.burgess at qut.edu.au
Wed Feb 23 16:07:01 PST 2011


People with access to a server can install their own instance of Twapperkeeper. 

But any public service replicating the functionality of the Twapperkeeper website would likely experience the same crackdown. I do wonder though whether it's coincidental that the crackdown on TK occurred just a couple of weeks after the owner decided to introduce "pro" accounts to cope with demand. 

More discussion here: http://readwriteweb.com/archives/twitter_puts_the_smack_down_on_another_popular_app.php

On 24/02/2011, at 9:29, "Cornelius Puschmann" <cornelius.puschmann at uni-duesseldorf.de> wrote:

> Thanks for the information about 140kit.com, I will definitely check it out.
> I'm still wondering whether a more permanent solution can be found (funding
> drying up in May doesn't sound too promising).
> 
> I have a simple BASh/cronjob-solution scripts to pull data from the API in
> regular intervals, perhaps I should just go with that.
> 
> @Deen: you won't get whitelisted unless Twitter have changed their policy.
> I've been turned down twice on the grounds that there is whitelisting for
> applications only, not for academic research.
> 
> Best,
> 
> Cornelius
> 
> Am 23.02.2011 20:37 schrieb "Deen Freelon" <dfreelon at u.washington.edu>:
> 
> I would also be curious to know what others have been using or plan to use
> for harvesting Twitter data. I've used both TwapperKeeper and 140kit, and
> found that the latter is quite good for hashtag archiving, but not as good
> at keyword archiving. Further, 140kit has a max scrape time of one week,
> although that is manually renewable I believe. Finally, both TK and 140kit
> can be quite slow and even unavailable at times, and as we've just seen they
> may shut down at any time.
> 
> All of this has made me quite wary of relying on externally managed "clouds"
> for data collection. That is why I intend to set up my own Twitter
> harvesting operation for use within my own department, as many CS
> researchers do, and would encourage others with the necessary means and
> knowledge to do the same. Much valuable data can be collected even within
> the default API query limits, though I'll certainly ask Twitter to put me on
> the whitelist. Running one's own archiving operation is fairly cheap, and
> since you're only archiving your own data, you aren't hamstrung by hundreds
> of other jobs running simultaneously.
> 
> If there's any interest in learning how to set up small-scale Twitter
> scrapes, let me know and I'll write something up when I have the time. Best,
> ~DEEN
> 
> 
> 
> On 2/23/11 11:18 AM, Matt Munley wrote:
>> 
>> Cornelius,
>> How well would something like 140kit (htt...
> -- 
> Deen Freelon
> Ph.D. Candidate, Dept. of Communication
> University of Washington
> dfreelon at uw.edu
> http://dfreelon.org/
> 
> 
> 
> 
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