Cure for Twitter spam: Worse than the disease?
I’ve been very popular on Twitter lately. Too bad it’s not personal. Many subscribers seem to be gaining more attention than they’ve earned, and probably a good deal more than they want.
This past month has seen a surge in Twitter spam, subscriptions from followers who have created faux accounts to advertise their links or wares. The noticeable uptick has alarmed the blogosphere enough to warrant journalistic notice, off the record in intra-office chatter and on. The disingenuous among my own modest list of followers don’t appear to be peddling anything other than URLs, but it matters little. I have declared them a nuisance. The squatters must go.
These ‘people’ are not my friends.
(Credit: CNET Networks)
Unlike Facebook, which requires dual authentication before friends make it onto the social roster, Twitter attachments can be single-sided. I’ve never had reason to block anyone before, but scooping off the scattered scum is proving more tedious than it should. From the list of followers on Twitter.com there is the option to subscribe to a user’s updates or to block them. Blocking one user resets the follower list, putting you back at the starting point of your multipage count. That’s fine if all your new “pals” cluster on page 1, but crummy if they’re spread between pages 4, 7, and 10. Simple pagination would simplify the task, as would the ability to batch process blocking.
Up until about a week ago, Twitter’s API was itself the meta-blocker, barring developers from building the rejection feature into third-party services. Now the capability is turned on, Twitter confirmed, though documentation won’t be broadly shared until “some time next week.” At that point, third-party services like Twhirl, a desktop client that adds all sorts of goodies to the Twitter experience, would be able to let users block stalkers by hovering over their icons from a scrolling interface.
For a service this popular, better blocking tools should be a no-brainer. Hopefully, they will be before the spam really catches on.
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Cure for Twitter spam: Worse than the disease?
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