mandag 1. mars 2010

Twitter opens access to its data, engages in price discrimination

Twitter gave access to its ‘Firehose’, a special real-time feed of every single public tweet delivered, to more than a half-dozen startups today. The company is also asking the community whether there are any other startups that might be worthy of a partnership. This is all part of a broader plan to give all developers an equal chance to create valuable services out of Twitter’s data stream.
Twitter has competing priorities; it must find a revenue model to satisfy the investors that have valued it at $1 billion and it needs to cultivate an equitable developer ecosystem where a one-man shop can innovate and compete with the biggest players like Google.
Companies like Google and Microsoft have already gotten a headstart on mining Twitter’s data after signing agreements to incorporate tweets into real-time search. Terms were not disclosed, but Bloomberg reported that the deals made the company profitable with $25 million in additional revenue. Some of the larger startups in Twitter’s ecosystem like Seesmic and Tweetmeme also have had financial arrangements for deeper data access for some time, although they also have not disclosed details. The deals raised concerns that Twitter was giving companies with more capital an unfair advantage over less well-financed or pre-revenue startups.
In response, Twitter has created a payment scheme that is proportional to the size of the company, although it didn’t reveal whether it was calculating that in terms of revenue or user count.
”We came up with a fair way to license access that scales with their business,” wrote Ryan Sarver, who runs business development for Twitter’s platform team, in a blog post.
It’s a healthy move: a little price discrimination can be good if it subsidizes competition and innovation.
Tags: firehose
Companies: Google, Twitter
People: Ryan Sarver

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