Monday, April 4, 2011

[twitter-dev] Re: consistency and ecosystem opportunities

I've just shipped an iPad app (http://bit.ly/f78dpr) that's about as
simple a Twitter client as you could get. I mentioned my concerns
about shipping this under the new ToS in the thread "Do new ToS
conditions apply to my app?". This app, simple and non-commercial as
it is, was a wonderfully creative effort for me, and I'd hate to see
it and other similar efforts disallowed.

I'm still confused, after reading all the above verbiage, whether this
app is OK or not from Twitter's perspective. Can anybody enlighten me
on this?
Thanks,
Howard

On Mar 12, 4:59 pm, Ellsass <cpa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Scott, I don't think it's ludicrous to think that Twitter may
> eventually pull the plug on, say, statuses/home_timeline, effectively
> eliminating clients.
>
> If Twitter's concern is ad revenue, all they'd need to do is add a
> clause to their TOS specifying that all third-party clients must show
> in-line ads or the quickbar or whatever else Twitter uses to generate
> revenue. Then the issue is very clear for developers -- either
> integrate Twitter's revenue-producing content into your client, or
> don't make a client at all.
>
> The fact that they seem to be going about this a different way, and
> being a bit unclear as to what might happen to a client-only app,
> leaves open the possibility that they simply want to close down the
> market so the only access to one's timeline is via a first-party app.
>
>
>
> Scott Wilcox wrote:
> > Hello,
>
> > For a few days now I've read what people have said in reply to the update from Ryan. There are some crazy reactions and responses to what Ryan has said. In essence, the entire reaction is my opinion is completely overblown.
>
> > Not in any sense what-so-ever have Twitter said that you can no longer post updates on behalf of users. Its ludicrous to suggest so. What they have have said (and in my opinion - quite clearly) is that it is better to direct your time and effort into a product that is not just a simple client and does more than just provide viewing and posting of tweets. There are so many half-arsed clients out there that do little more than just show and post tweets. If by chance a user was to use these low grade applications as their first experience of Twitter, it would probably put them off using it in the long term.
>
> > I do fully believe that is why they have released their own branded clients for iOS, Macs and other devices. It provides a consistent experience for the end-users.
>
> > The other thing that people seem to completely overlook is that Twitter are providing a freely accessible API at no charge to developers. It pains me to see so many developers standing the moral high ground. If you were paying for access to a service or product and it changes, you have a very valid reason to complain. To complain about a service provided free of charge for you to use at the end of the day frustrates me to no end. No single developer has a god given right to have access to the API, perhaps that should be remembered.
>
> > Scott.
>
> > On 13 Mar 2011, at 00:16, Adam Green wrote:
>
> > > Interesting that neither Ryan or anyone else from Twitter has replied once to any of the questions here, (way to go on showing your interest in the developer community, Ryan),  so I'll address this question to everyone else in the group. I don't read Ryan's message as demanding that apps are no longer allowed to send tweets on behalf of users. Is that supposed to be what he said? I think he is saying that apps should be more than *just* clients that let you read and post tweets. How to tell the difference, I have no idea, but I think in Ryan's mind there is a difference.
>
> > > I'll ask it as clearly as I can. Is it still allowed for an app to accept a tweet from a user and post it into their account?
>
> > > Is the /statuses/update api call still allowed in an app?
>
> > > Let's not wait for Twitter to respond, since they clearly don't want to any longer. Let's try and figure this out ourselves. What does everyone think? Can apps still send tweets?
>
> > > If yes, there is still a market for Twitter API developers. If not, the Twitter API is over. It is that simple.
>
> > > Maybe Ryan or anyone from Twitter can also find the time to answer this.
>
> > > On Sat, Mar 12, 2011 at 6:45 PM, Duane Roelands <duane.roela...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > Wow.  "Thanks for getting so many people interested in Twitter.  Now
> > > get lost."
>
> > > This is appalling.
>
> > > --
> > > Twitter developer documentation and resources:http://dev.twitter.com/doc
> > > API updates via Twitter:http://twitter.com/twitterapi
> > > Issues/Enhancements Tracker:http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list
> > > Change your membership to this group:http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk
>
> > > --
> > > Adam Green
> > > Twitter API Consultant and Trainer
> > >http://140dev.com
> > > @140dev
>
> > > --
> > > Twitter developer documentation and resources:http://dev.twitter.com/doc
> > > API updates via Twitter:http://twitter.com/twitterapi
> > > Issues/Enhancements Tracker:http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list
> > > Change your membership to this group:http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk

--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhancements
Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list
Change your membership to this group: http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk

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