Living in the Twitter jungle

by Roberto Mazzoni | July 9th, 2009

Twitter is becoming one of the most popular Web 2.0 sites and a very effective way to keep in touch with other people and finding new friends, but it also become one of the main targets for spammers and hackers in general. For this reason the Twitter staff is becoming tighter in enforcing anti-spam rules and suspending accounts. Sometimes these rules change day by day, so you might end up having your account suspended because of somebody else’s actions.

It is very easy to impersonate anybody while generating a tweet. Let’s say I want to create a spam message but I want to attribute it to you. I simply build a tweet that looks like this: “RT @yourtwittername spam text spam link” and send it from my account. People who read it will believe that the message was originally created by you and that I am simply re-tweeting it because I find it interesting. If anybody were to come to your account and look for the original message, they wouldn’t be able to find. But goes to all the work of checking it?

Additionally the spammer will cover up his tracks by canceling the re-tweet message from his own account history after having sent it so nobody will be able to trace it back to him and Google won’t have the time to index it. Yet he will have obtained his result of spamming all the people who are following him, and using your Twitter name in doing so.

I have personally observed this on my own Twitter account and the only remedy is to be on the watch. The danger here is of looking like a spammer while you are not and the fake Tweet could also contain a link to a site that has some kind of malicious software into it (like a virus). If this happens, Google picks you up as source of contagion, they report you to Twitter and Twitter suspends your account until the link with the virus is removed. So keep an eye on the @reply section of your account and change regularly the password to you account.

Roberto Mazzoni

Please read more of my blog posts on my new blog that has been created to host all of my content and that will be kept updated regularly from now on. Commodoreblack.com was my first blog ever and I owe it my beginning in this beautiful blogging world, but with experience I learned that it was better for me ton create a blog that carried my own name. And I advise you to do the same if you ever plan to start a blog.

http://robertomazzoni.com

Please read more of my blog posts on my new blog that has been created to host all of my content and that will be kept updated regularly from now on. Commodoreblack.com was my first blog ever and I owe it my beginning in this beautiful blogging world, but with experience I learned that it was better for me ton create a blog that carried my own name. And I advise you to do the same if you ever plan to start a blog.

http://robertomazzoni.com

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The dangers of follower churn

by Roberto Mazzoni | June 22nd, 2009

How would you feel by discovering that your account on Twitter has been suspended and all the followers you have now find a unfriendly owl picture telling them to move along there is nothing there to see anymore. How much a hit would that be for your pride knowing that all people searching for your name on Google and finding your Twitter account (which is ranking pretty high) would find out that you have been suspended due to strange activity?


Twitter policy about spamming is becoming more and more stringent also because the abuses are spreading with the growth in popularity of this environment. The policy on how to prevent spam are always evolving and so you’d better check them out regularly if you are serious about creating a presence on Twitter. Yet one of the most stressed one in recent times is about “follower churning”. What is it? Let’s take the definition given on the Twitter official site: “If you have followed and unfollowed people in a short time period, particularly by automated means (aggressive follower churn)”.

Following new people and then unfollowing those that don’t follow you back has been one of the key methods for increasing the follower count and one of the most controversial. Recently more attention is being put by Twitter developers to this practice and Doug Williams, one of the Twitter platform developers, has stated recently that using automatic software to add a large number of social connections daily and then breaking the connection with those who don’t reciprocate can result in account suspension.

It is again a matter of size and numbers. You can still follow and unfollow, but when big numbers and too fast a churn come into play your account can be suspended. Following many people all at once and un-following many of them the same day is almost sure cause of suspension.

Roberto Mazzoni

Please read more of my blog posts on my new blog that has been created to host all of my content and that will be kept updated regularly from now on. Commodoreblack.com was my first blog ever and I owe it my beginning in this beautiful blogging world, but with experience I learned that it was better for me ton create a blog that carried my own name. And I advise you to do the same if you ever plan to start a blog.

http://robertomazzoni.com

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