I subscribe to GovExec.com to received daily updates on what is happening in the world of the Federal Government (my day job is as a Air Force civilian employee = Federal civilian employee). This article is from the “nextgov” technology and the business of government webpage, specfically their “Tech Insider” blog. The entry by Emily Long is titled “Your Tweets, Archived for Eternity,” goes right to the thoughts about sending electronic postings out into the ether and possible concerns about privacy.
Your Tweets, Archived for Eternity
By Emily Long 04/14/10 02:03 pm ET
Think those 140-character ideas you have will be forgotten? Think again–the Library of Congress on Wednesday announced that it will acquire and archive every public tweet–ever–starting from Twitter’s inception in 2006. According to the Library’s Facebook page, that’s more than 50 million per day and billions in total.
In true Twitter fashion, the news came out via the @librarycongress feed: “Library to acquire ENTIRE Twitter archive — ALL public tweets, ever, since March 2006! Details to follow..”
In a blog post, Matt Raymond, the Library’s director of communications, said that the scholarly and research implications of the collection are important. But a lot of what comes out in the Twitterverse is noise–what people ate for breakfast, for example–so sorting through the collection will be no small task. Of course what seems meaningless to us now probably can say a lot for future research, but it will be interesting to see how the archive is used and how long the Twitter craze lasts.
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