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Twitter's Geo-Tagging Spurs Experiments By Third Party Developers

By David Weir | Nov 30, 2009

In the week-and-a-half since Twitter rolled out its much-anticipated geo-tagging API, regular visitors to twitter.com haven’t seen any evidence of it yet.

That’s by design.

As a company spokesperson explained on the Twitter blog at launch, the idea was to provide developers with the tools they need to experiment with ways to geo-tag Tweets and display locations. Early examples include applications developed by Seesmic Web, which also provides a tool for realtionship-building at the micro-blogging service called Mr. Tweet.

Others experimenting with geo-tagging include Birdfeed, Foursquare, Gowalla, and Twidroid. There is an iTunes app with geo-tagging at Twittelator Pro.

The company has disabled geo-tagging by default for all of its users, which means you need to “opt-in”  to use it. That’s easy enough to do, by visiting the Settings page and clicking on “Enable Geo-tagging” link.

So, for publishers, this heralds the beginning of a new opportunity to build out a “hyper-local” business model for content. As I noted back in  August, when Twitter co-founder Biz Stone announced that geo-tagging was coming:

“To me, this heralds an exciting moment for the future of hyper-local media. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist or a master chef to imagine the business model. Targeted ads, coupons, rebates, and special offers of all kinds can be marketed via Twitter. Potential customers can be segmented by location, transforming them into qualified leads worth many multiples of, say, your average newspaper reader.”

BTW, Twitter has also updated its privacy policy to specifically include geo-tagging, which, of course, could offend some users’ sense of privacy (thus the mass disabling setting of this function by default). The policy update demonstrates Twitter’s continuing sensitivity to its users’ needs, and stands in sharp contrast to online services that seem intent on infringing now, and explaining later.

Another notable launch recently by the social media service is “ReTweets,” which have been rolled out to what Stone calls “a very small percentage of accounts” on an experimental basis.

This activity is occurring within the context of the findings by Pew Research last month that roughly one-fifth of Americans on the Internet now use Twitter or a similar service, which is up from only 11 percent in April.

According to Pew, three distinct groups are now driving this growth: “social network website users, those who connect to the internet via mobile devices, and younger internet users (those under age 44).”

Earlier Bnet Media Post

Geo-Coded Twitter + Hyper-Local Media = CoolBiz Model

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Think Globally, Tweet Locally

    Twitter Blog - 82 days 5 hours 28 minutes ago

    In August we announced that we were working on a new API that would provide developers with the ability to geotag tweets. Today, the Geotagging API is officially available. This release is unique in that it's API-only which means you won't see any changes on twitter.com , yet. Instead, Twitter applications like Birdfeed , Seesmic Web ,...

  • Twitter Launches Geotagging API

    Media Bistro - 81 days 7 hours 57 minutes ago

    Twitter officially launched its geotagging application-program interface, platform director Ryan Sarver announced on the Twitter Blog. Users can opt-in by clicking a box in their settings menu, and several third-party tools support the API. Sarver's post

  • Breaking News: Twitter Debuts New Front Page

    PR 2.0 - 196 days 1 hour 47 minutes ago

    Twitter just rolled out its redesigned front page for those visitors new to Twitter.com. If you’re already a registered user, you won’t notice the new look unless you sign out and refresh the home page. The new homepage helps provide a frame of reference, expectation setting, and also offers a lens into the conversations populating the

  • Twitter finally enables geotagged tweets with new location API

    VentureBeat - 82 days 5 hours 50 minutes ago

    Twitter finally rolled out its new application programming interface for tagging tweets with your location. It won’t appear on Twitter.com, but it will be enabled for location-based services like Birdfeed, Seesmic Web, Foursquare, Gowalla, Twidroid and Twittelator Pro. Tweetie already switched on some geotagging functionality earlier this...

  • Cleaning Up The Stream: Twitter Kills Duplicate Tweets

    Tech Crunch - 118 days 9 hours 5 minutes ago

    By now we've all likely seen the new "report spam" links on each Twitter user's profile. Twitter rolled out that feature on twitter.com yesterday, and plans to roll out an API , so third-party apps can use it, sometime today. But Twitter has also quietly rolled out another new feature aimed at cleaning up the stream: Blocking duplicate tweets

 

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