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DMac
14th April 2010, 11:44 AM
How Tweet It Is!: Library Acquires Entire Twitter Archive (http://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2010/04/how-tweet-it-is-library-acquires-entire-twitter-archive)

April 14th, 2010 by Matt Raymond

Have you ever sent out a “tweet” on the popular Twitter social media service? Congratulations: Your 140 characters or less will now be housed in the Library of Congress.

That’s right. Every public tweet, ever, since Twitter’s inception in March 2006, will be archived digitally at the Library of Congress. That’s a LOT of tweets, by the way: Twitter processes more than 50 million tweets every day, with the total numbering in the billions.

We thought it fitting to give the initial heads-up to the Twitter community itself via our own feed @librarycongress. (By the way, out of sheer coincidence, the announcement comes on the same day our own number of feed-followers has surpassed 50,000. I love serendipity!)

We will also be putting out a press release later with even more details and quotes. Expect to see an emphasis on the scholarly and research implications of the acquisition. I’m no Ph.D., but it boggles my mind to think what we might be able to learn about ourselves and the world around us from this wealth of data. And I’m certain we’ll learn things that none of us now can even possibly conceive.

Just a few examples of important tweets in the past few years include the first-ever tweet from Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey (http://twitter.com/jack/status/20), President Obama’s tweet about winning the 2008 election (http://twitter.com/barackobama/status/992176676), and a set of two tweets from a photojournalist who was arrested in Egypt and then freed because of a series of events set into motion by his use of Twitter (http://twitter.com/jamesbuck/status/786571964) and (http://twitter.com/jamesbuck/status/787167620).

Twitter plans to make its own announcement today on its blog from “Chirp,” the Official Twitter Developer Conference, in San Francisco.

So if you think the Library of Congress is “just books,” think of this: The Library has been collecting materials from the web since it began harvesting congressional and presidential campaign websites in 2000. Today we hold more than 167 terabytes of web-based information, including legal blogs, websites of candidates for national office, and websites of Members of Congress.

We also operate the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program www.digitalpreservation.gov, which is pursuing a national strategy to collect, preserve and make available significant digital content, especially information that is created in digital form only, for current and future generations.

In other words, if you’re looking for a place where important historical and other information in digital form should be preserved for the long haul, we’re it!

(Thanks to my co-blogger, Jennifer, for the headline. She always does a much better job of that than I do!)

k-os
14th April 2010, 11:46 AM
And they are . . . happy . . . about that?

I am so out of touch with people outside of this forum.

sirgonzo420
14th April 2010, 11:47 AM
And they are . . . happy . . . about that?

I am so out of touch with people outside of this forum.


You and me both...

:-\

DMac
14th April 2010, 12:17 PM
You 2 are not alone in that thought.

Ares
14th April 2010, 12:29 PM
Great the Library of Congress will be archiving this:

(601):
I just realized I use Twitter to keep of track of when I get drunk.


http://www.textsfromlastnight.com/texts/page:13

DMac
14th April 2010, 12:44 PM
Our Library of CONgress feels it necessary to document for posterity gems such as this:

(904):

I consider it a successful poop when you only have to wipe once.

Lord, take me now...

I am me, I am free
14th April 2010, 01:11 PM
And the point is...?

Carbon
14th April 2010, 01:19 PM
(904):

I consider it a successful poop when you only have to wipe once.



Bah... they'd still have to wipe twice just to see if the first one got it all.

Tweeters are liars.

Gknowmx
14th April 2010, 02:24 PM
And the point is...?


The point is the GIM1 archive will NOT be in the LOC. >:(

Gaillo
14th April 2010, 02:40 PM
And the point is...?


The point is the GIM1 archive will NOT be in the LOC. >:(


No... they have a special room at the FBI forensics lab for that! ;D

cigarlover
14th April 2010, 03:00 PM
I can happily say I have never tweeted.

sunshine05
14th April 2010, 03:07 PM
I can happily say I have never tweeted.


Me too. Glad now that I avoided it.

k-os
14th April 2010, 03:19 PM
I have never sent a tweet either. I don't see the point in it.

Fudup
14th April 2010, 05:27 PM
I can happily say I have never tweeted.


Me either. Nor Facebooked, Myspaced, or Craiglisted.

Insipid things all.

iOWNme
14th April 2010, 07:34 PM
This is a Brave New World.....

BrewTech
14th April 2010, 07:53 PM
I can happily say I have never tweeted.


I, too, am a proud NON-TWEETER.

:banrasta

steveoc
15th April 2010, 08:59 AM
Me neither, I dont get it.

Ive always been bought up to cherish privacy, and treat all information on a strictly need to know basis. I probably even take it a bit far sometimes ...

Facebook is a classic example.

I choose to cycle everywhere for example, and take part in a cycling forum as well as GSUS. Cyclists are mostly older people who are often individualistic types, and a fair share of them are also from a sports / police / military background. A lot of very fit, tough old guys who just want to be left alone. Many with bad attitudes and a daily decreasing respect for the commercialised car driving masses around them that try to kill them every day on the roads. Trust me, some of these are NOT a group of a people that you want to piss off.

Well It comes to light occasionally that some idiots start a group on facebook advocating running cyclists off the road, and this gets bought up on cycling forums.

It only takes a few hours in each case to find out who the ring leaders of these groups are, and then to find out where they work, where they live, what their phone numbers are .. etc. Ill leave the rest to your imagination, but it can be quite hilarious sometimes.

Or there was the case in Melbourne recently where there was a street car festival being organised, but the sponsors pulled out before the weekend. As a result, hundreds of illiterate morons turned up at one of the sponsor's franchise shops at night, and started trashing the place. The police sealed off the area and a riot took place. Now, the idiots that organised the riot did it on facebook, and even went so far as posting photos of the night on facebook - including 'tagging' all of their friends in the photos pictured kicking in shop windows and generally causing havoc. How dumb are these people ?

We have a whole generation who are bought up believing that they are entitled to everything - including fame. Fame is nothing more than a complete lack of privacy - not something I aspire too any day soon.

So storing all tweets in the LOC ? That is completely insane, and serves god only knows what purpose. The obvious question is "Who the hell is ever going to read all of that ?", when in the future they will be generating ever more of such nonsense on a daily basis.

Im very tempted now to setup an account on twitter, and proceed to break down all manner of selected literary works into 140 character snippets and post them as a serialised feature on twitter for posterity. Books such as .. The protocols of the elders of Zion, Mein Kampf, The Koran, The anarchists cookbook, The collected posts of Hypertiger, etc, etc, etc, should all be tweeted for long term storage.

Twisted Titan
15th April 2010, 11:01 AM
What the @#$%^&*( is a tweet??

Gknowmx
15th April 2010, 04:29 PM
Can you say 'Twitter Twisted Titan' 3 times in a row.. quickly?

BoatingAccident
15th April 2010, 06:54 PM
We have a whole generation who are bought up believing that they are entitled to everything - including fame. Fame is nothing more than a complete lack of privacy - not something I aspire too any day soon..


Bingo, the whole twitter, myspace, facebook lovin'..."look at me" crowd can kiss my ass. I will not join them. I like my privacy, and feel it's being infringed upon more and more.

Back in high school/grammer school, we've all felt peer pressure. Today, we have social pressure.

Different, but very much the same.

keehah
16th July 2022, 08:44 AM
Well I finally saw it. News reporting has devolved to using tweets as sources, writing articles around tweets, and now, finally, just a tweet.
Did not even embed the tweet properly to display the tweet's attached image (on my browser at least) so actually this act of journalism/blogging was even less than a tweet.

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