Twitter As An Emergency Broadcast System? Doesn't It Have To Work Regularly First?
from the just-saying... dept
While we definitely found the story of a student in Egypt using Twitter to alert people that he had been arrested interesting, it does seem like a bit of a stretch to then say that it makes sense to create an emergency alert system via Twitter. Though it has some potential to be powerful, an emergency alert system needs to be reliable -- and Twitter is rather infamous for its pretty regular downtime.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: communications, emergencies, infrastructure, messaging, stability
Companies: twitter
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emergency
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yeah, it's really fast
So if the power goes out and I can't get twitter messages via the web, or the cell phone system is overloaded and messages get dropped, how exactly will this work better than, say, radio?
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There already are...
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The responsibility is the way of success
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Social computing in enterprise software - leveraging Twitter like microblogging capabilities
http://cloudcomputing.blogspot.com/2008/08/social-computing-in-enterprise-software.ht ml
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Twitter was buzzing with posts on the recent L.A earthquake nine minutes before AP officially broke the news. This Twitter phenomenon once again proved that unintended consequences are always larger than intended consequences. As we would have never imagined people find amusing ways of using Twitter ranging from keeping buddies updated and getting caught drinking when they called in sick and the boss followed their tweets to ensue wave of media coverage to get out of jail. A recent proposal to use Twitter as an emergency system met with stark criticism citing Twitter's availability issues. I don't see this as an "either or" proposition. The answer is "and" and not "yes, but". Let's use Twitter for what it is worth. It's a great microblogging and crowdsourcing tool to tap into the wisdom of crowd with a very little overhead and almost no barrier to entry.
Enterprise software should seriously consider this social computing phenomenon and leverage its capabilities by integrating such a tool in their offerings. For instance a social CRM application can use such a tool to help sales people effectively follow, collaborate, and close opportunities. The customer support system can provide transparency into the defect resolution process by service representatives tweeting the progress instead of logging it in semi-static IT ticket systems.
Following individual tweets has its obvious advantages but correlating multiple tweets could be extremely powerful and could yield to interesting nontraditional usage models such as using it to run predictive markets, sentiment analysis, or to track a recall on salmonella tainted tomatoes in real-time.
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