Twitter March 11 switched on its long-awaited location-sharing feature and made the service opt-in. Twitter's geolocation feature, which works for Mozilla Firefox 3.5 and Google Chrome on Windows, tags users' tweets based on where they are tweeting from. The way Twitter has done this should endear it to privacy hounds that get nervous about location-sharing services. Facebook, meanwhile, is set to launch its own location-sharing service for its 400 million users. The leading social network would do well to follow Twitter's flexible approach to location.
Twitter March 11 switched on its
long-awaited location-sharing feature and made the service opt-in.
Twitter's geolocation feature tags users' tweets based on
where they are tweeting from. Twitter co-founder Biz Stone and his team believe
this additional layer of context will make Twitter a richer network. See Stone's example of why
this is
useful:
"Let's say I'm at my office and I hear a loud boom.
It sounded serious, so I search Twitter for 'boom.' Among the first
results could be someone who tweeted 'Boom go the fireworks!' This
could be anywhere in the world. However, if that person had activated
the new
tweet location feature then the neighborhood data under the tweet would
read, 'SoMa.' Now I know it's just fireworks going off in my
neighborhood."
What the cool technology integration users get to see is that the
key tweet word "SoMa" is linked to a Google map to let users explore
the area some more. The point is that Twitter can now not only help its roughly
70 million users discuss what is happening, but where.
This is a concept that will be explored to the hilt at
South-by-Southwest in Austin, Texas, this coming week. ReadWriteWeb's Marshall
Kirkpatrick
said at least 25 companies will be making location-related announcements at
SXSW this week.
Tweet by location works for Mozilla Firefox 3.5 and
Google Chrome on Windows. To use the tool with older versions of these Web
browsers, users will have to download the not-yet-defunct
Google Gears app.
To get started, users may navigate to the
How to Tweet Your Location Web page on
Twitter and enable "Add a location to your tweets" in Twitter's
account settings
page. Twitter client applications will then be able to tag a tweet with exact
location.
To tweet with location on a per-tweet basis after Location
has been enabled, users must click the crosshair icon below the update box on
the left. Users will then be asked to let Firefox "Remember Your
Location." Double check to make sure "Remember for this site"
box is checked and click "Share Location."
Location will then show below the update box. Of course,
users who want to turn this off can click the "x" next to their
location. This turns off Tweet With Your Location on a per-Tweet basis. Location
will not be shown until users re-enable it by clicking the crosshair icon.
To disable Tweet With Your Location entirely, users must
go back into accounts setting and uncheck the Add a location to your tweets box.
Users may also delete specific tweets with location data, or remove all
location data from all of your tweets by clicking the "delete all location
data" button on the settings page.
This can take up to 30 minutes, but note that it does not
guarantee the information will be removed from all thirdparty application's
copies of the data or results from search engines such as Google or Microsoft
Bing.
The way Twitter has done this should endear it to privacy
hounds that get nervous about location-sharing services. Google recently
discussed this issue -- the creepy factor associated with location-based
services -- in detail with eWEEK.
Facebook meanwhile is set to
launch its own location-sharing service for its 400 million users. The leading
social network would do well to follow Twitter's flexible approach to location.