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February 4, 2009 8:17 AM PST

The 'Twitter Effect': Possibilities and limits

by Stephen Shankland
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Is there a "Twitter Effect," by which the rapid spread of information through the microblogging service can crush a Web site with traffic? As I see it, the answer is yes, but it's not as simple as it might appear at first blush.

First, the background: Mashable CEO Pete Cashmore, whose Twitter postings more than 52,000 people follow, concluded his February 2 tweet mentioning that a blog post on "how to use Twitter to find your next job" took that site down with an inundation of traffic. He suggested calling the phenomenon the Mashable Effect.

Next, Pingdom, a company that tracks site availability, suggested instead the more general and more apt Twitter Effect:

It will be interesting times if Twitter is about to join the ranks of Slashdot and Digg as a potential site crasher...

The Twitter Effect formula = (Original tweet * followers) + (retweets * followers of retweeters) + (retweets of retweets * followers of those), and so on.

This way, tweets can spread out like the branches of a tree or a root system and reach a very large number of Twitter users. The spread is basically only limited by the size of Twitter's user base. If the tweet contains a link to a site, this site is bound to get a significant amount of traffic as the tweet spreads.

Overall, Pingdom has it right. People like to share links with their followers over Twitter, and good ones get passed down the chain, or retweeted (look for the all-too-easily missed "RT" in front of a tweet). But there are some caveats that probably should be noted before people assume their 140-character bright ideas will bring the Internet to its knees.

(Credit: Twitter)

I see three circumstantial considerations. First, It helps to start with somebody like Cashmore, with his relatively gargantuan Twitter audience. Memes from lesser figures would take much longer to spread, if they did at all, giving Web sites more warning that heavy traffic was on the way and time to respond.

Second, at this stage in Twitter's development, it helps when the tweet is about something the tech-skewed Twitterverse cares about, with Twitter itself being high on that list.

Third, plenty of Web sites have had well over a decade to figure out how to handle heavy traffic problems, so it'll be the smaller sites that are likely to have insufficient capacity to handle the traffic.

Then I see three more general caveats, too.

First, a key part of Pingdom's back-of-the-envelope math is the retweet effect. But many people have symmetrical relationships on Twitter--I follow you, you follow me. Consequently, the amplification factor of retweeting will be reduced by some echo-chamber factor that Twitter users are seeing their own tweets retweeted.

Second, there's the interest factor. Some fraction of people just won't click on the link or retweet it. So Pingdom's formula mostly governs a theoretical maximum spread. But that's kind of like guessing every neutron in a fission bomb strikes another uranium nucleus.

Twitter Fail Whale

The Twitter Fail Whale is seen less often these days, but Twitter's infrastructure does potentially limit the spread of viral information.

(Credit: Twitter)

Last, there's a scaling problem: If the retweet network is so well established that memes are constantly bubbling up into virtual flash mobs, Twitter itself will be inundated with traffic. It's true that the service handles heavy loads vastly better than it did a few months ago, but even if Twitter holds up, will people? If your Twitter stream is constantly awash in tweets and retweets, many of them repeats of other retweets you've already received, will you spend your day glued to Twitter for the latest updates?

For those of us who get hundreds or thousands of e-mails a day, it takes more for an interesting message to stand out above the crowd, and Twitter doesn't get some magic exemption from the signal-to-noise problem just because it's popular. And of course, any popular medium will be a target for spam and opportunistic marketing efforts that degrade people's experiences.

Pingdom does have it right in broad terms, though. By virtue of the retweet network, Twitter can be a powerful, fast-acting amplifier for information well suited to viral spread.

But it's probably good news more than a reason to panic: although some Web sites may crash as a result, my guess is that Twitter more often will just bring Web site publishers the traffic they crave.

Originally posted at Webware
December 21, 2008 3:25 PM PST

Fake Facebook college class groups uncovered

by Larry Dignan
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This was originally posted at ZDNet's Between the Lines.

We may be about to see the latest frontier of viral marketing--fake students starting groups for the incoming class of 2013 in the name of data collection.

Brad Ward, a recruitment specialist at Butler University, outlined the details on his blog. He became suspicious after talking to a colleague at Winthrop University. Here are the common links:

Class of 2013 groups are being started at a bunch of universities.
The people that start the groups aren't registered at those schools.
Those same names--Patrick Kelly, Justin Gaither, James Gaither among others--pop up repeatedly.

The game: Get admin rights to groups that collectively add up to about 1,000,000 freshmen. Ward concludes:

Think of it: Sitting back for 8-10 months, (even a few years), maybe friending everyone and posing as an incoming student. Think of the data collection. The opportunities down the road to push affiliate links. The opportunity to appear to be an 'Admin' of Your School Class of 2013. The chance to message alumni down the road. The list of possibilities goes on and on and on.

The Chronicle of Higher Education is now on the case and has further details about a company called College Prowler that appears to have a common bond with these groups.Most of the Chronicle's information revolves around a message aimed at Ward. The Chronicle reports:

Later today, Luke Skurman, College Prowler's chief executive, confirmed in a message on Mr. Ward's blog that his company had been "directly or indirectly involved" in creating the 2013 groups. "The original purpose was to use these groups as a way to inform students that they can access a free guide about their new college on our site," he wrote. "No employee or anyone else associated with College Prowler has used these groups to send out messages or wall posts." He provided a list of names "associated with" College Prowler and said they would be removed from the 2013 groups immediately.

Yet Mr. Skurman also wrote that he learned "about an hour ago" that College Prowler had been working with an unnamed company "that may have been using fake aliases to create these groups." Mr. Skurman did not respond to The Chronicle's requests for an interview, so The Chronicle could not confirm that he had written the message on Mr. Ward's blog.

The solution here seems pretty obvious. Universities need to start their official groups on Facebook before some spam happy affiliate marketing type does. There may also be a verification hook for Facebook too. Should it verify who you really are?

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