[Air-L] Twitter Data Sharing Update - Thou Shalt Not Share Collections of Tweets
Ulf-Dietrich Reips
u.reips at ikerbasque.org
Thu May 5 08:19:40 PDT 2011
To me it seems the owners of Internet-based services go too far
sometimes in claiming rights to authors' content. To vary an old
Internet metaphor: An owner of a road should not be entitled to claim
royalties to pictures of cars that have driven over the road.
Eventually it may boil down to something like this: you may publish
collections of tweets, but they will have to be stripped from any
service-specific "marks" (e.g. hashtags).
Best --u
At 9:51 Uhr -0500 5.5.2011, Michael Zimmer wrote:
>Stu-
>
>I'm not in full agreement with your starting point that tweets
>"yearn to be free". I think the nature of the platform (140
>character limit, broadcast as one voice among millions of accounts,
>viewed via a live stream that makes it almost impossible to read
>every single one) also supports the notion that tweets are meant to
>be fleeting.
>
>-michael
>
>
>
>> On May 5, 2011, at 9:35 AM, Stuart Shulman wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Michael,
>>>
>>> We did not contest the violation warning and so we took the data
>>>down. The policy is another matter. These are tweets that yearn to
>>>be free, insofar as tweets can collectively yearn for anything:
>>>
>>> http://bit.ly/ixJVHu
>>>
>>> In this instance, I find myself liking the Facebook policy, which
>>>in an opposite manner sets data free. This may explain, in part,
>>>why the "Scraping Facebook" video seems to be getting more views
>>>than the one on harvesting Twitter tweets:
>>>
>>> http://www.screencast.com/t/iW3rvdYY
>>>
>>> ~Stu
>>>
>>> On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 10:25 AM, Michael Zimmer <zimmerm at uwm.edu> wrote:
>>> It appears the Twitter API doesn't care if you're selling or
>>>giving it away, as I.4.a prohibits any attempt to "sell, rent,
>>>lease, sublicense, redistribute, or syndicate access to the
>>>Twitter API or Twitter Content to any third party without prior
>>>written approval from Twitter", as well as noting that "Exporting
>>>Twitter Content to a datastore as a service or other cloud based
>>>service, however, is not permitted"
>>>
>>> http://dev.twitter.com/pages/api_terms
>>>
>>> I'm not justifying their terms, but it does appear that you violated them.
>>>
>>> -mz
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Michael Zimmer, PhD
>>> Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies
>>> Co-Director, Center for Information Policy Research
>>> University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
>>> e: zimmerm at uwm.edu
>>> w: www.michaelzimmer.org
>>>
>>>
>>> On May 5, 2011, at 7:24 AM, Stuart Shulman wrote:
>>>
>>>> Twitter closed down our efforts to share post-Osama bin Laden Twitter data
>>>> (or any other collections) for research purposes, again citing their TOS &
>>>> API TOS.
>>>>
>>>> http://bit.ly/l8DSA3
>>>>
>>>> To be clear: we were giving the data away, not selling it. Also,
>>>>it was not
>>>> scraped of Twitter. Rather, it was gathered using a Twitter-authorized
>>>> account and an API that lets us fetch 1500 items at a time.
>>>>
>>>> It is a shame that the now 2 million tweets cannot, for example,
>>>>be sampled
>>>> and coded using a crowd source model. Or could they?
>>>>
>>>> I am assuming the provision against sharing data does not extend to
>>>> individuals who gather it and keep it to themselves or work with it in a
>>>> research team.
>>>>
>>>> ~Stu
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>>
>>>> Stuart Shulman
>>>> President & CEO
>>>> Texifter, LLC <http://www.texifter.com/>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Have you tried DiscoverText?
>>>> http://discovertext.com
>>>> *Featuring the Facebook Graph & Twitter APIs*
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>
>>>
>
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