Twitter

Technology trends usually begin in Asia and Europe, with social media trends following suit. Lately, there have a slew of arrests made in Asian countries for status updates people are leaving on their social media sites. The two cases I look at in this blog post both occurred on Facebook.

The first case comes from Today Online “Man being investigated for allegedly inciting violence online” in regards to status updates Abdul Malik Mohammed Ghazali left on Facebook. The Singapore police arrested Ghazali for making comments on his Facebook page in regards to “burning” a certain prime minister for various incidents Ghazali felt this prime minister was responsible for.

Another individual in Thailand spoke out against the Royal Thai Family and was arrested under a specific Thai law, “Man Arrested After Lese Majeste Facebook Comment (original blog post by US Asian Correspondent). Both these incidents were in Asian countries and happened within the last month.

This sparks interest to see how this will eventually pan out in the United States. The statements made by the men arrested above may have been violations of law in the countries of incident, but how will this play out in the United States? We have elections coming up and people get very upset and angry over politics. If you say the wrong thing on your Facebook page or Twitter profile, about a candidate, the President, etc. you may have the Secret Service knocking on your door.

The United States is based on “Free Speech,” but there are also laws that prevent individuals from alluding to committing violent acts against individuals even if they are not an elected leader. This story has not been written yet and I feel there is plenty of case law that will result from the numerous future arrests for violations of this nature. MV

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Update: 08/09/10 - The failure mentioned in this post was from a personal Twitter persona standpoint. This article chronicles how I lost my way Tweeting on my personal Twitter account with friends, associates, and people I meet on a daily basis. From a corporate perspective I see Twitter activity based on scalability and mission. Additionally, the intent of this blog post is to have a follow-up post that chronicles how I successfully regained my positive Twitter persona in 4 Easy Steps, look for this in a day or two. MV

Prior to 02/2009 I never participated in any social networking sites. Then a friend introduced me to WordPress blogging and Twitter. The result was an injection of social networking into my life that I had never experienced before. I became an active Twitter persona Tweeting daily and meeting new people regularly. There was a satisfaction of connecting with people all over the world with like thoughts and sometimes argumentative thoughts. All the same I was having conversations daily with cool people all who I met on Twitter. Then something happened that one would expect would increase a social networkers presence on Twitter.

July of 2009 I was transitioned into a full-time position as “Social Media Strategist.” Initially, I found myself Tweeting as I had prior to assuming this title, but slowly over a period of 6 or 7 months I fell off the Twitter grid. My failure was not due to lack of social networking enjoyment, it was due to scalability. During this time I had created 2 more personal Twitter accounts and 4 corporate Twitter accounts. As most of you know, trying to keep conversations going on 7 different Twitter accounts is impossible, even using TweetDeck, Seesmic, HootSuite, etc.

Here is how I failed in 4 easy steps:

1) Lost my purpose - The purpose of social media/social networking is to build community and community comes first. The minute you take your eye of this purpose in the social realm you may as well close your Twitter account. I took my eye off community in exchange for a larger community. Due to scalability I #Failed at building community and I lost my purpose on Twitter.

2) Too Many Twitter Accounts – The time it takes to cultivate and nurture conversations on a Twitter profile is significant. To continue an authentic conversation requires time and when I became responsible for 7 Twitter accounts I became overwhelmed. Granted 4 were outward facing communication channels, but nonetheless this contributed to my Twitter #Fail.

3) Went On Auto Pilot – Using HootSuite or another Twitter client to schedule Tweets is great, but once I traveled down this path it led me to lessen my non-automated Twitter activity. I let my accounts become robotic and people don’t respond to this type of social networking interaction. Even if your a Twitter celebrity, people are quickly able to discern the difference between an auto tweet and a real tweet. People want authentic conversations and by going automatic I #Failed.

4) Lost Interest – I know what your thinking, you #Failed on Twitter because you just got bored with it? No, I lost interest due to the 3 reasons above. My Twitter conversations dwindled and people lost interest in me plain and simple. I took myself out of the conversations and found myself a little lost trying to get back into the conversation.

People are smart and those on Twitter want to be engaged with other’s or they would not be there. Once you lose purpose, try to manage too many Twitter accounts, go on auto pilot you will loose interest in your Twitter activities. The simple reason is we as people can only focus on so many things and doing the above causes things to go out of focus. I encourage you to avoid the 4 steps I list above and keep your Twitter interest alive and well. MV

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