Tom :
I probably missed the point. I see the targeted users, their data is
public and accessible using no authentication but the API limits are
too small. I can't gain OAuth access from them. I would like to
increase this to more API calls using OAuth.
--Regards,
Denzil
On Sun, Jun 5, 2011 at
If you have the permission of the users, you can probably use their
OAuth tokens, which gives you an almost infinite API limit (actually
it's still 350 per user, but you won't easily break that). If you want
to perform an analysis on a group of users without their consent
(without OAuth access)
Oh! I should avoid creating multiple user accounts in that case.
I would like to perform analysis on a target set of users and not
streams. How do I proceed? I should add that 350 requests per hour is
highly insufficient for my use case.
--Regards,
Denzil
On Sat, Jun 4, 2011 at 11:33 PM, Tom
I'd like to point out that this is against the TOS. You should limit
your API requests where possible - for a normal application with user
interaction you won't need more than 350 per hour. If you do some sort
of data analysis, you may need to use streams instead.
Tom
On 6/4/11 7:53 PM, Corr
Tom :
Thanks. I will create multiple user accounts. I guess about 20 (350 *
20 = 7000 considering 1 request per second) should solve my issue.
--Regards,
Denzil
On Sat, Jun 4, 2011 at 3:35 AM, Tom van der Woerdt wrote:
> If you authenticate, all requests (except for search) will go into th
If you authenticate, all requests (except for search) will go into the
350 requests. If you want 500, then perform 150 unauthenticated and 350
authenticated. If you need even more, use more accounts to do the requests.
Tom
On 6/3/11 11:06 PM, Correa Denzil wrote:
Ah! I feel similar.
Which e
Ah! I feel similar.
Which essentially means that despite acquiring data which is publicly
available I will be limited to 150 requests per hour and even OAuth
will not help increasing it to 350 ?
--Regards,
Denzil
On Sat, Jun 4, 2011 at 2:32 AM, James Gifford wrote:
> The way I'm reading it
The way I'm reading it it falls under 1. But I might be mistaken.
--James Gifford
http://jamesrgifford.com
On Jun 3, 2011, at 17:01, Correa Denzil wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am collecting Twitter data for my research. The API says that :
>
> [1] "Anonymous calls are based on the IP of the host and are
Hi,
I am collecting Twitter data for my research. The API says that :
[1] "Anonymous calls are based on the IP of the host and are permitted
150 requests per hour. This classification includes unauthenticated
requests (such as RSS feeds), and authenticated requests to resources
that do not requir