How to waste my time on Twitter
And anyone’s else for that matter. It’s not hard, you just have to ignore the most basic common sense rules of web-sharing and communication.
Be an ‘Internet Marketing Guru’
Yes, a guru, a ninja or a rockstar. You choose your title. After that, add me on Twitter. I’m a trusty fellow and allow Twitter to announce me when I’m added so that I can check everyone out and see their beautiful tweets. But not you Mister I.M. Rockstar. Let’s see how your profile looks:
- Following: 65.000 (roughly)
- Followers: 64.000 (roughly)
- Tweets: 5000 (roughly)
Out of all these people you’re following or follow you, you TALKED to how many? You retweeted how many links from them, or from other accounts/websites? Why are your last 5-6 pages filled with links to your amazing schemes to make money online fast and online sales pages to obscure ebooks for which people have to pay to learn that they can use AdSense to monetize their blogs? Come on! Add me! See if I care!
Twitter is about communication. About states. About the moment. Twitter is about friends and great content. Twitter is not about “I’m a guru in my own backyard!”. Twitter is about “I’m an Internet Marketing ENTHUSIAST, and I want to SHARE some amazing content with you!”
Click here to read the full blog post!
New phising attempts via Twitter DM
A new wave of phishing attempts makes its way through the direct messages (DM) system on Twitter.
You might receive a DM from one of the people you follow that could look like this:
Username: haha, that u on here? http://videos.ds*****w.com/
Clicking the link will take you to a page that for the untrained eye looks exactly like the Twitter login page. DO NOT enter your username & password. It’s not a Twitter API or anything. You’d just be giving away your authentication data.
Also, don’t be quick to judge the one sending you the DM as a spammer and report him/her. He might only be the victim of one such attack.
Jennyfer, I Won’t Follow You! Ever.
I’m a moderate Twitter user. A couple of tweets a day, sometimes announcing new blog posts, sometimes engaging in conversations. This evening I managed to finally get some free time to enjoy my Twitter account.
The minute I started tweeting, in other words became active, I received 3 fried request. 2 out of these 3 requests were made by new accounts under the name “Jennyfer”, following about 2000 users.
Every account like this has one or two tweets maximum and all sound like this:
- I’ve made $6000 last night with ‘Some name’;
- $15.000 overnight. Click here to find out how.
It’s easy to see that these are spam accounts, and yet they average about 10 followers.
So, when I get a request from one of these accounts, what are my choices? Let’s see:
- Ignore the request;
- Block the user.
But what about my desire to actively fight spam accounts? What if I don’t want to “block” the user and protect myself? What if I want to report the user and protect everyone else?
I really think that Twitter needs a “Report spam” button and some text filters as most of the phrases these spam accounts use are standard presets.
So, Twitter, will you help the community actively defend itself?
Update: Until such options will be – if they will ever be – integrated, the one alternative is to follow Twitter’s spam dedicated account @spam, and report spam to them.
