I think one solution is if twitter could use their hidden karma score
to provide good citizen flag for us.
So, they shouldn't provide any kind of score to the outside world via
the web or API, but they could use it to provide an indicator for a
clean account.
In other words, we would assume all accounts to be potential spammers
until we see the good citizen flag on the account, then we can be a
little more trusting of that account. Not completely trusting, but
just use it as an indicator..
On Oct 17, 6:43 am, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky zn...@borasky-
research.net wrote:
I don't know about a karma score, but Twitalyzer does have an API
and so does Klout. For that matter, Viralheat has an API and they can
get both Twitalyzer and Klout scores.
That said, I don't know that there's ever really going to be a one
size fits all Twitter user metric. But there are quite a few
crowdsourcing and curation tools starting to show up, some of them
open source. But personally, I think it's more fun to just collect raw
data via the API and roll your own. ;-)
--
M. Edward (Ed) Boraskyhttp://borasky-research.nethttp://twitter.com/znmeb
A mathematician is a device for turning coffee into theorems. - Paul Erdos
Quoting Justin justin.carl...@gmail.com:
Rating/scoring users is something I'm working on as well and I agree.
I've found sorting out bots and pure spammers to be very difficult.
Some folks tweet so much they resemble bots/spam.
Feels like a pipe dream but if they can I'd love a karma scoring
system directly from the API.
On Oct 16, 4:28 am, Dave-twiends i...@davesumter.com wrote:
I really like the option of reporting spam via the api. I’ve been
blocking spam on my site for a long time but this gives me an option
to report it now, and hopefully get these account suspended quicker so
that they don’t come back.
It would be really great if we could have a proactive api function as
well, where we could get the likelihood of a user being a spammer. I
know this is really difficult to do, and wrought with pitfalls, but
perhaps it could be structured in some way? Maybe you could provide a
“good citizen” flag for a user (i.e a user that hasn’t had any
complaints, and has a certain account age). That way you don’t
negatively impact any users, but we can then at least treat these
users differently when they sign up with our site.
I’m seeing more and more the need to provide different limits to users
based on private trust/karma score we develop for each user. This
would be a very valuable input for us to detect potential problem
users before they can cause damage.
Thanks
Dave
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources:http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter:http://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhancements Tracker:http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list
Change your membership to this group:
http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi
Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list
Change your membership to this group:
http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk