Thanks Guys. will reapply.
On Apr 16, 1:46 pm, Doug Williams <[email protected]> wrote: > We provide you the ability to programmatically throttle your API usage on > the client side. I've documented it here [1]. If your users are complaining, > then you should take the time to use the tools described in the > documentation to gracefully handle API usage. > > 1.http://apiwiki.twitter.com/Rate-limiting > > Doug Williams > Twitter API Supporthttp://twitter.com/dougw > > On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 12:43 PM, Alex Payne <[email protected]> wrote: > > > We always supply a reason when rejecting whitelisting requests. That > > reason should be in the body of the rejection email. > > > If you create a bunch of accounts, our spam team is likely to suspend > > them. Please address the issues mentioned in the rejection email and > > re-apply. > > > On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 12:34, Brandon Geiger <[email protected]> > > wrote: > > > > Our users continue to complain about hitting API limits for our app. I > > > applied to get whitelisted, but got rejected. I'm thinking of creating > > > several "test" accounts that run the more intensive API call > > > procedures as cron jobs, to not use our users' api calls. > > > > Any idea why we got rejected? (app name is Swattr) > > > Any objections to this approach? > > > -- > > Alex Payne - API Lead, Twitter, Inc. > >http://twitter.com/al3x
