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League of Inveterate Poets

The out-of-context contextuality of a foolish sage


Taking Back Twitter: An Experiment





By on October 6, 2009

Anyone who knows me knows I’m a nut for Internet social media. Earlier this year I wrote about my social media evolution, chronicling how I’d moved along with each new wave of the growth of the social web, from chat rooms to forums to blogging to Facebook, Friendfeed and Twitter.

I started my first Twitter account (@trappermark) around a year ago, and was immediately intrigued with how easy it was to find and engage fascinating people from all over and all walks of life. At the risk of romanticizing the good ol’ days (yeesh, I’m talking about just 365 days ago!), it seemed like back then you could build up a fairly large following and still find that the majority of your followers were there to engage, to converse, to share and have fun.

That is most definitely no longer the case.

As most people with an open Twitter account would attest these days, the vast majority of followers end up being robot accounts, spammers, or just people who are only interested in tweeting links to their own stuff. It’s begun to feel like the social is being sucked out of social web.

At times I feel very tempted to give up on Twitter. But then I think about how much I have gotten out of it (at its best) and how much time I’ve put into it. So starting today–and over the next few weeks–I’m going to see if I can take back Twitter.

Here’s what I’m doing:

  1. I’m cleaning out my Twitter account by unfollowing anyone who shows evidence that they only followed me to add to their over-inflated follower numbers or to broadcast their spam at me.
  2. I’m going to actively seek out “real people” who are still in my account but with whom I’ve never before engaged. I will be placing these “tweeps” in a special column in TweetDeck labeled “The Real Trappermark.” And I commit to make a real effort to engage with as many of these people as possible on a daily basis. I want to reclaim that early thrill of discovering new and different people, and letting them discover me. I want to put the social back in my social media.

If you’re on Twitter, and you’re “real” and want to have conversation, feel free to follow @trappermark. I’m now using a verification service called TruTwit to prevent future spammers from re-cluttering my Twitter stream. If you follow me, TruTwit wil send you a DM (Twitter Direct Message) with a link to verify your account. TruTwit uses Twitter OAuth authorization service, which means that when you log in there, Twitter will teall TruTwit that you are indeed the owner of the Twitter account, but TruTwit has no access to your Twitter login or account info. I’ll get a message that you have verified yourself, and I’ll then gladly follow you back. [EDIT: I've decided to discontinue using TruTwit (see first two comments below) and go back to hand-managing follower requests.]

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Comments

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=607663752 facebook-607663752

    Interesting experiment. The only problem I would have is the TruTwit service. I automatically delete and often block anyone sending me a DM that I do not know well on Twitter. A new follower would most likely fall in this category. Personally, I would definitely, ignore or block any DM from a Tweet requiring me to click a link, confirm my identity – frankly do anything.
    What has worked well for me is Topify. It emails me when someone new follows me with basic stats (linking, conversation, tweets per day, followers/follower ratio, date started Twitter, profile pic, etc.) and their last 10 tweets. I can tell at a quick glance if they are real, if they are interesting, if it's worth my time and if it's worth the stream space. I can then follow, block or report to spam all with one click.
    Now I don't have over 1,000 followers like you:) But I do think the 600+ I follow (900 or so follow back) are real and to me interesting. If they are not real I've chosen to follow the feed for a particular reason. I can thank Topify for making this easy.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Mark-Traphagen/501556045 Mark Traphagen

    After a week of trial and feedback from a number of followers, I've decided to discontinue the TruTwit service. It is a nice idea, but at the end of the day I agree that it is too big a barrier, therefore keeping away too many legitimate would-be followers.

    I do so with a sigh, as between personal and professional accounts, I now manage six Twitter accounts, several of which get dozens of follows a day. I'll give Topify a try to see if that helps as I go back to hand-managing my Twitter followers.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=607663752 facebook-607663752

    It takes a humble man like yourself, a true Twitter expert, to admit they have more to learn:)

    Report back on how Topify is working for you or if you find something better.

    P.S. FB Connect is not notifying me of follow-up comments either. I checked back after seeing your tweet.

  • http://foolishsage.com trappermark

    Apparently Topify is still in beta and sending out invites “as available,” so I'll have to wait until mine show up.

    And Facebook lately seems like they might need to use some of their recent income boost to purchase the Fail Whale logo from Twitter ;-)

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=607663752 facebook-607663752

    Interesting experiment. The only problem I would have is the TruTwit service. I automatically delete and often block anyone sending me a DM that I do not know well on Twitter. A new follower would most likely fall in this category. Personally, I would definitely, ignore or block any DM from a Tweet requiring me to click a link, confirm my identity – frankly do anything.
    What has worked well for me is Topify. It emails me when someone new follows me with basic stats (linking, conversation, tweets per day, followers/follower ratio, date started Twitter, profile pic, etc.) and their last 10 tweets. I can tell at a quick glance if they are real, if they are interesting, if it's worth my time and if it's worth the stream space. I can then follow, block or report to spam all with one click.
    Now I don't have over 1,000 followers like you:) But I do think the 600+ I follow (900 or so follow back) are real and to me interesting. If they are not real I've chosen to follow the feed for a particular reason. I can thank Topify for making this easy.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Mark-Traphagen/501556045 Mark Traphagen

    After a week of trial and feedback from a number of followers, I've decided to discontinue the TruTwit service. It is a nice idea, but at the end of the day I agree that it is too big a barrier, therefore keeping away too many legitimate would-be followers.

    I do so with a sigh, as between personal and professional accounts, I now manage six Twitter accounts, several of which get dozens of follows a day. I'll give Topify a try to see if that helps as I go back to hand-managing my Twitter followers.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=607663752 facebook-607663752

    It takes a humble man like yourself, a true Twitter expert, to admit they have more to learn:)

    Report back on how Topify is working for you or if you find something better.

    P.S. FB Connect is not notifying me of follow-up comments either. I checked back after seeing your tweet.

  • http://foolishsage.com trappermark

    Apparently Topify is still in beta and sending out invites “as available,” so I'll have to wait until mine show up.

    And Facebook lately seems like they might need to use some of their recent income boost to purchase the Fail Whale logo from Twitter ;-)

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