I think it's important to make the distinction between marketing activity and actual spamming. This type of request is part of what makes Twitter attractive to people and organisations. I think it is acceptable within (low) limits and hopefully Twitter will implement some user controls on this.
On Feb 6, 1:34 am, Dossy Shiobara <[email protected]> wrote: > Andrew Badera wrote: > > Yeah, these requirements sound pretty spammy. > > 1. Follow a lot of people on Twitter. > 2. Wait for people to follow you back. > 3. ??? > 4. PROFIT! > > You know, @DaveRhodes is SO underutilized. I'm sure he could tweet all > day about how to MAKE MONEY FAST. > > -- > Dossy Shiobara | [email protected] |http://dossy.org/ > Panoptic Computer Network |http://panoptic.com/ > "He realized the fastest way to change is to laugh at your own > folly -- then you can let go and quickly move on." (p. 70)
