----- Forwarded Message ----- 
From: "Edward Britton" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2010 
Subject: Library of Congress Wants Your Tweets 

. . .And all your email, and all your websites, and all your blogs, and 
all your comments ON blogs, and all your. . .well, pretty much 
everything else. 

AS EVER, government REMAINS the enemy of the people. I honestly don't 
know how much evidence it will take to get this simple message across, 
but hey, I'm gonna do my best to find out. :-) 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Source: 
http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/92189-library-of-congress-to-acquire-all-twitter-messages
 
(et alibi) 


Library of Congress tweets it will acquire all Twitter messages 
By Jordan Fabian - 04/14/10 12:52 PM ET 

The Library of Congress is poised to obtain all messages on the 
microblogging site Twitter dating back to March 2006, it said Wednesday. 

In a post on its official Twitter account the library said: 

Library to acquire ENTIRE Twitter archive -- ALL public tweets, ever, 
since March 2006! Details to follow. 

Twitter has over 105 million registered users, including about 200 
members of Congress. 

A Library spokesman later expounded on the new archive in a blog post, 
writing that its primary function will be to assist researchers and 
educators. 

"I'm no Ph.D., but it boggles my mind to think what we might be able to 
learn about ourselves and the world around us from this wealth of data," 
wrote the spokesman, Matt Raymond. "And I'm certain we'll learn things 
that none of us now can possibly conceive." 

The details of what exactly the acquisition will encompass is unclear. 
>From the LOC's tweet and accompanying blog post, it appears that tweets 
that are "locked" or shaded from public view will not be incorporated 
into the library's new archive. 

Twitter users have the option of making their posts public, which can be 
accessed by anyone on the Web; or private, which can only been seen by a 
select group of "friends." 

Details such as friend and follower information and how the LOC will use 
the information specifically have not yet been made public. Raymond 
promised a more comprehensive press release on the archive later Wednesday. 

Later Wednesday, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone shed more light on how the 
archive will work. 

In a blog post, Stone wrote that "Only after a six-month delay can the 
tweets will be used for internal library use, for non-commercial 
research, public display by the library itself, and preservation." 

The Library said that it would collect every public tweet, but Stone 
wrote that "A tiny percentage of accounts are protected but most of 
these tweets are created with the intent that they will be publicly 
available." 

Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

The acquisition could pose concerns for privacy advocates, who could 
argue that too much private information will soon become part of the 
public domain. 

-- 

comments: 
http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/92189-library-of-congress-to-acquire-all-twitter-messages
 
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