If You Say Something In Public, You Can Be Quoted And If You Say Something On Twitter, That's Public
from the in-case-you-were-confused dept
It seems that plenty of people are still having trouble understanding that most things posted to Twitter are posted in public. Apparently a local newspaper in Michigan ran into some angry community members when a writer for the paper dared to quote some Twitter comments without first contacting the people in question for permission. The newspaper stands by its usage of the comments, noting that they're fair game, and Caroline McCarthy over at News.com (where I found the original story) makes the point succinctly:But here's somewhere to start: If something is public, it's quotable. If you don't want to be quoted, don't say it on the Internet. If you have a public Twitter account and say something, then, yes, it's public. Should Twitter users expect to be contacted and asked for permission to have their tweets reprinted? Don't count on it.Still, as noted, it is interesting to see how people seem to perceive something like Twitter as being more private. I'm guessing that may change over time, but it does suggest the sort of level of intimacy that Twitter creates among many people who use it.
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Filed Under: journalism, public, quotes
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Exposing Privates
(use a bad-taste-band-aid if offended)
Hopefully these angry people have learned their practical lesson. Once it's on the open internet, consider it permanently public, period. This is just common sense. If you want to keep something private, make the extra effort to ensure privacy (and get a gold star sticker) or use a secure medium. I'm sure I've said plenty of stupid things on the internet (including in this post), but the price of such a wonderful tool is its very, very, very long memory.
Also, having now read the "tweets" myself... Streisand Effect.
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If you know your commet can be retweeted, you probably should treat your words as in public in the first place.
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Correction
it does suggest the sort of level of understanding of technology among the many people who use Twitter.
FTFY
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I had a conversation with a customer years ago when I worked a job supporting a website. She asked, "I don't really need a password, do I? I mean, someone else would have to be on my computer to use my account anyway, right?"
In this scenario, I imagine that they feel like it's private because they only have 20 followers and they're not thinking about the fact that more than just your followers can read your public tweets.
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So this is where it gets interesting...
Twitter is a form of publishing text to the internet (public, but still original writing protected by copyright). This would be a fun one to test. After all, making a broadcast public, showing a movie in public or putting a newspaper's content on the internet is all public - shouldn't that also be fair game for others to quote? If that's the definition being used for pulling a quote from twitter, why should content lifting only go one way? :)
Just seems to be an inconsistent position for a newspaper to take, all things considered.
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How 'bout "direct" messages
But twitter also offers a service they call "direct messages" - and that's something else.
People may think they have good reason to believe these direct messages are private.
I believe, however, that these are legally the property of Twitter Inc, for them to pass on to whomever they want.
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Re:
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"Except as permitted through the Services (or these Terms), you have to use the Twitter API if you want to reproduce, modify, create derivative works, distribute, sell, transfer, publicly display, publicly perform, transmit, or otherwise use the Content or Services."
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Re: Correction
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Re: Re: Correction
You win for the most redundant comment, ironically calling other stupid LoL
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Twitter is not Private
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Re: Re:
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Re: Re: Correction
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Re: Re: Re:
"...you have to use the Twitter API if you want to [blah blah blah]"
Does not imply:
"...that newspapers *should* ask for permission."
It only implies that they should've used the twitter API to reproduce the tweets. Nowhere in the Twitter TOS does it say that you cannot reproduce the tweets, however. In fact, they WARN that:
"You are responsible for your use of the Services, for any content you post to the Services, and for any consequences thereof. The Content you submit, post, or display will be able to be viewed by other users of the Services and through third party services and websites (go to the account settings page to control who sees your Content). You should only provide Content that you are comfortable sharing with others under these Terms."
Source: http://twitter.com/tos
This seems to indicate that, unless you specifically set the privacy options, your tweets are public (everyone can see them). If they are public, they are "quotable".
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people who ignorantly subscribe
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
*My* tweets are displayed on a page at the guardian.co.uk, but someone working at the section they appear in had the decency to ask first.
I'm glad more people read what I have to say, AND the guardian is using my tweets with my knowledge & approval.
This local newspaper in Michigan : #lazyfucks
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please dont...
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Re:
AKA: I'll see your conflation and raise you an extra conflation
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Re: Exposing Privates
Just imagine how little we would hear from Ms. Palin if this were the case...
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
"Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 17 U.S.C. § 106 and 17 U.S.C. § 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright."
Nothing here nor in Twitter's ToS dictates that someone copying your tweets must ask for permission to reproduce your tweets in a manner that constitutes as fair use. Calling them lazy fucks when they're reporting on something that is occurring right at that moment is silly. Public is public. Get over it.
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Re: Re: Exposing Privates
If we required people to get permission for everything, we wouldn't be able to be any sort of commentary, criticism, news reporting, etc. on lots of things because people would just refuse permissions.
That's why we have fair use clauses in our copyright laws.
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Re: please dont...
Now what?
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What was the point again?
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