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Why I just deleted all 77.5k tweets I’ve sent out over the last 10 years

dougbelshaw.com

23 points by dajbelshaw 9 years ago · 14 comments

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jzl 9 years ago

I'd downvote this if I could. It was submitted by the author to boost views. This article had pretty much no useful content. He deleted his tweets because he didn't like them changing their terms of service a few times. No deep analysis of why, though. And ... um, data mining? Like that's breaking news, that public tweets and likes could be data mined? Ok ... yeah, moving on, nothing to see here folks.

existencebox 9 years ago

What stands out to me is the call-out against "Data miners". This is ironic to me in that twitter has been historically one of the LEAST friendly platforms for data ingestion. They have very strict limits on # of historical tweets fetched, firehose access (to summarize, "no you can't have it"), and utilization of data, to the point that in most discussions about the platform they're seen as very closed. (or at least too risky to rely on) The author even acknowledges this in his having to use a third party service to extract the tweets to a _more searchable_ subdomain?

I guess what this ramble is meaning to say: Where does the author's globbing-in of "Data miners" come from, why the distaste, and how does mastadon solve the issue?

  • carlmr 9 years ago

    He's advertising his own service. His criticism night be justified, but there's no new reason he mentioned why he would leave Twitter exactly now.

    It's an ad.

getpost 9 years ago

I deleted all my favorites after Twitter renamed them to likes, and Twitter restored them a few months later, so I deleted my account entirely.

b3lvedere 9 years ago

"this service that used to be on the side of liberty is becoming a tool for the oppressor, the data miner, the quick-buck-making venture capitalist."

Gee, what a surprise.

I doubt there are a lot of companies that don't try to monetize their userbase and "free" product in some way eventually.

RickS 9 years ago

there's an irony to bashing the shallow corporatization of twitter while actively trying to manufacture outrage alongside a link to your competing service.

gross.

  • Dylan16807 9 years ago

    His? Did I miss something here? And the point of Mastodon is not having any company in charge.

    • RickS 9 years ago

      From the article:

      > In particular, I’ve been hanging out at social.coop, which I co-own with the other users of the instance.

      Now, whether that's "own" like "founder" or "own" like "credit union member" is perhaps up for debate, but the opening paragraph leads with an endorsement for a competing service over which he has partial ownership, in his words.

      • Dylan16807 9 years ago

        Since he's just advocating for people to join credit unions in general, I don't think it's a problem either way. But it looks like the latter from what I can see.

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