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Thursday, 12 July 2012 - Analysis: Is Twitter building ad business at expense of innovation? |
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They say their data shows that the method could be far more effective than conventional market research techniques.   Video  Tech Inc's invincible aura fades Gene that fights Alzheimer's may inspire new treatments Follow Reuters Facebook Twitter RSS YouTube Read Romney may name running mate early in election race 10 Jul 2012 House votes to repeal Obama healthcare law, again 5:12pm EDT UPDATE 2-Mammoth Lakes, Calif. files for bankruptcy 03 Jul 2012 Mali Islamists destroy tombs at famous Timbuktu mosque 10 Jul 2012 Freight train derails, catches fire in Columbus, Ohio | 12:37pm EDT Discussed 115 Texas governor rejects two provisions of health law 105 Russia’s Putin says the West is on the decline 104 Obama team targets Romney over taxes, Republicans cry foul Watched New research could help advertisers read your mind Tue, Jul 10 2012 3XSQ: Bankruptcy mystery, Spain pain 9:57am EDT U.S. Morning Call: Iowa futures firm PFGBest collapses 7:52am EDT Pictures Reuters Photojournalism Our day's top images, in-depth photo essays and offbeat slices of life. See the best of Reuters photography.  See more | Photo caption  Inside San Quentin A look inside San Quentin prison, California's oldest correctional facility and home to the state's only gas chamber.  Slideshow  Embedded in Afghanistan Scenes from Lucas Jackson's embed in Afghanistan.  Slideshow  Analysis: Is Twitter building ad business at expense of innovation? Tweet Share this Email Print Related News Privacy risk from ads in apps rising: security firm Mon, Jul 9 2012 Analysis: Microsoft loss reflects Web display ad world's woes Sun, Jul 8 2012 Facebook, Yahoo tie up, settle lawsuits Fri, Jul 6 2012 GM talking with Facebook about advertising again: sources Tue, Jul 3 2012 News Corp split sets stage for possible Lachlan return Thu, Jun 28 2012 Analysis & Opinion When editors bury that which cannot die MuniLand Snaps: July 11 Related Topics Tech » Media » Twitter's CEO Dick Costolo gestures during a conference at the Cannes Lions in Cannes June 20, 2012. Cannes Lions is the International Festival of creativity. Credit: Reuters/Eric Gaillard By Gerry Shih SAN FRANCISCO | Wed Jul 11, 2012 4:15pm EDT SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Is Twitter a technology platform, a media company -- or both? With Twitter's recent moves pointing toward "media company," there is a growing concern among technologists that a trend for greater content control will compromise both innovation and Twitter's future in favor of short-term profits. The days of fledging start-up are gone for six-year-old Twitter, which is now a major player in the big battles shaping the future of the Internet. With over $1 billion in investment, it has backers looking for an IPO payday -- an environment that demands more than trumpeting a nifty communications protocol. The most recent dust-up arose after a top executive announced in late June that the company would soon introduce "stricter guidelines" around how independent developers may build applications on top of Twitter. Around the same time, the social networking service LinkedIn disclosed that it no longer had permission to include Twitter streams. Those moves are part of a larger clamp-down on how and where Twitter's content - the stream of Tweets - is viewed by users, who collectively publish 400 million Tweets daily. Twitter's monthly active users have steadily risen to over 140 million, although it lags far behind Facebook, which claims over 900 million. Technologists want the service to remain an open, free-wheeling environment, where new applications can be built without restriction and innovation remains the main goal. For Twitter, increasing control smooths the path to selling advertising and other money-making deals. Greater control makes it easier for Twitter to sell advertising against its content -- the media industry's traditional proposition. It could also facilitate future initiatives in e-commerce, where Twitter could allow shoppers to click on deals within Tweets and take a cut of the revenue. "The question is, β€˜is Twitter the dial tone or is Twitter the content?'" said Greg Cohn, a former Yahoo executive who oversaw the company's developer partnerships. "I think increasingly the indications are showing that Twitter is the content." How Twitter moves forward with its developer circle will likely shape the fate of its business, if recent history serves as a guide. What appears to be Twitter's increasingly ad-driven approach is upsetting third-party developers, many of whom helped the service gain popularity in its early days by providing features that Twitter itself did not, from slick desktop clients like Tweetdeck to photo-uploading tools like Twitpic. "They're going to keep compromising themselves over and over again because they need to make money," said Dalton Caldwell, a programmer who founded the music streaming service imeem and App.net, a software toolkit for developers. "We can't fault them for following their business model," he said. "But it's going to disappoint us. It's a shame." "WE'RE NOT A MEDIA COMPANY" Twitter's ad business began to take shape after the 2010 ascension of CEO Dick Costolo, who defined the company's core business of selling ads as "promoted tweets" within the Twitter stream, and selling "trending topics." Twitter aims to show individual users relevant promoted tweets by deducing interests from the accounts a user follows. Costolo has significantly ramped up Twitter's sales operations, expanding the team from a handful of employees to over 250 around the world. He's also built out the content offerings with everything from an expanded "Discover" feature, which presents popular stories being shared on Twitter in a news-like format, to special events such as Twitter chats and even originally produced video that's integrated with major ad campaigns. Still, Costolo has consistently rejected the notion of Twitter as a media company, instead characterizing the service as nothing more than a new-fangled distribution network. "We're not a media company," Costolo said in January at a media industry conference hosted by All Things D. "We're in the media business. We distribute traffic." That stance helps assuage concerns on the part of the many media companies that use Twitter extensively that the platform is not a competitor. Twitter, in fact, is aiming for deeper partnerships with media firms with new offerings such as "expanded Tweets." It has also suited Twitter to pose as a tech company when it comes to potential regulatory and legal burdens, said Lou Kerner, founder of the Social Internet Fund. Twitter has adopted the legal position that it has no ownership of individual tweets. The matter came to the fore in May, when a New York court ordered the company to hand over information about a user who was arrested during an Occupy Wall Street protest. But even though it lays no claim to the content of tweets, Twitter has moved aggressively to absorb or squash companies that have built products on top of the Twitter platform. In 2010, Twitter acquired the maker of Tweetie, a popular iPhone client. The following year, Twitter acquired Tweetdeck, and then sought to shut down UberMedia, a company that made another competing Twitter client software. Developers' fears were fanned again late last month, when LinkedIn revealed that it no longer had a license to stream its users' tweets within the professional networking web site. Dozens of developers took to Internet forums and their personal blogs to voice their frustration, including Aaron White, a developer who quickly published a blog post declaring that he would no longer write apps for Twitter. Twitter had abruptly cut off its data pipeline to White's own app in January. Twitter said the app, called "Proxlet," which lets users filter out Tweets on certain topics or mute certain accounts, had violated Twitter's rules. "They want to control the whole ecosystem," White said. "If I were making a third-party app right now I wouldn't feel too safe." THE PAST AS PROLOGUE? The fortunes of other tech companies may provide a sobering guide on the how efforts to control developers translates into success. In 2006, as the first iPhone was nearing release, Apple CEO Steve Jobs resisted allowing third-party apps onto the phone, according to his authorized biographer, Walter Isaacson. Jobs, who died last year, changed his mind only after top deputies lobbied him repeatedly, but insisted on closely screening the apps and keeping tight control over Apple's product. The App Store β€” which today offers over a half-million apps curated by Apple β€” has emerged as a major success, helping propel the iPhone's popularity and supporting a lucrative industry of app developers. Contrast Apple's fortunes with MySpace, the once-dominant social network whose decline began around the same time. In 2006, after News Corp. acquired Myspace, divisions emerged over the issue of third-party developers. MySpace executives resisted ceding control of the platform, while Ross Levinsohn, the head of News Corp.'s digital division and now interim CEO of Yahoo, pushed for more openness, former News Corp. employees said. A year later, in 2007, MySpace competitor Facebook opened its API, a move that eventually gave rise to popular Facebook apps like FarmVille, the hit game by Zynga Inc., and Spotify, the music streaming service -- all of which bolstered Facebook's transformation into a sprawling network. But even as Facebook grew, it faced regular complaints that it was neglecting its developer community. "The relationship between a developer and a platform is a very delicate one," Cohn said. Twitter's growing pains, he added, are "nothing too different from what any platform goes through as they mature." (Reporting By Gerry Shih; Editing by Leslie Adler) Tech Media Related Quotes and News Company Price Related News Tweet this Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints   We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/ Comments (1) DanFarfan wrote:   Edition: U.S. Africa Arabic Argentina Brazil Canada China France Germany India Italy Japan Latin America Mexico Russia Spain United Kingdom Back to top Reuters.com Business Markets World Politics Technology Opinion Money Pictures Videos Site Index Legal Bankruptcy Law California Legal New York Legal Securities Law Support & Contact Support Corrections Connect with Reuters Twitter   Facebook   LinkedIn   RSS   Podcast   Newsletters   Mobile About Privacy Policy Terms of Use AdChoices Copyright Our Flagship financial information platform incorporating Reuters Insider An ultra-low latency infrastructure for electronic trading and data distribution A connected approach to governance, risk and compliance Our next generation legal research platform Our global tax workstation Thomsonreuters.com About Thomson Reuters Investor Relations Careers Contact Us   Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. 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