Spam Accounts Swarm In as Esurance Giveaway Sparks 3 Million Tweets

Esurance definitely pulled off a last-second marketing coup at the close of last night's Super Bowl, but now spammers are seizing the moment as well.

More than 100 fake Esurance accounts have been created on Twitter in the past  24 hours, and thousands of users are following and retweeting the accounts in hopes of winning $1.5 million. 

That's the sum the insurer promised to one lucky Twitter user who shared the brand's hashtag, #EsuranceSave30. With such a large prize on the line, the hashtag has exploded across Twitter. According to search tool Topsy, the hashtag has been used more than 3 million times in less than 24 hours.

While it's a clear bonanza for Esurance, it's also posing a potential security risk for aspiring millionaires. Fake accounts using the brand's logo and hashtag have gained large followings and promised "extra entries" to those who connect to their accounts. 

The promotion ends at 4 a.m. Eastern on Tuesday, Feb. 4., so if you see some friends retweeting bogus accounts between now and then, you might want to tell them to watch for that little blue "verified" check mark on @Esurance's official account before following or sharing.


    



The YouTube Leverage Factor – What Is It And How To Use It

There is nothing intrinsically difficult about using YouTube to send targeted traffic to your various offers. Yes, at this point you need to approach things a little differently since Google bought them and did their usual dances. As an Internet marketer you should be aware of leveraging YouTube to achieve the maximum exposure. Well, we are here to help set things straight and get you going.

You do not have to be a Hollywood director to succeed at YouTube, but you cannot get away with crappy videos, either. Whether you should get a camera (video) all depends on what your videos are trying to accomplish and what you want to do for content. There are hundreds of thousands of videos uploaded on YouTube on a regular basis, and a majority of these aren’t shot with a good camera, which is why you should try to use to give real value to your viewers. There are some decent webcams that will work if you want to talk and let people see you, but make sure the quality is not poor.

The more numbers of subscribers you have for your YouTube channel, the more repeat traffic you’ll get to your videos. So ultimately, you do want to increase the number of subscribers that you have to your channel, and doing so starts with you subscribing to other YouTube channels that are relevant to yours. When you do this, you’ll find that you’ll get noticed by the channel owner, who might in turn subscribe to yours – it’s all about give and take. There is also nothing wrong with encouraging viewers to actively subscribe to your channel, though. Also, when you’re posting about your YouTube channel on your blog, don’t just link to the channel directly – add the word “subscribe” besides the link to your channel so that people know that they should be subscribing.

If you are new, it is a good idea to get an ebook from a reputable source that will show you what is best to do for channel profile page creation. The profile is like an About Me page, and it does matter to people when they are thinking of subscribing to your channel. Personalizing is an essential element that you need to focus on at all times and try to give your viewers the best possible experience, while you build a relationship with them through your videos.

You can get search engine traffic plus lots more by using YouTube and video marketing, and we do not know why more people in IM ignore this.

Agency Creates App to Break the Cycle of Over-Hashtagging

You think you're clever, but you're not, with your #amirite, #notgonnalie, #bitchesbetrippin and (God forbid) #epic. You, wanton hashtagger, must be stopped. 

Threshold Interactive, an independent digital shop in Los Angeles, has created an app called Hash Snag that aims to rid the world of #useless #meaningless hashtags. That's a whole lot of heavy lifting.

Here's how it works: The app intercepts your attempted tweets and then butchers them to help you avoid embarrassment. It either erases the hashtags for you or replaces the most common offenders (#YOLO, #LOL, etc.) with self-defeating terms like #Unfollow.

The agency, responsible for "Pocket Like It's Hot," Snoop Lion's musical ode to frozen meat snacks, dispatched chief innovation officer John Montgomery to explain why we need this tool. In the video below, he tries to chip away at the problem of misused, over-the-top hashtagging. And, oh yeah, he mows down a distracted hashtag abuser with his car. Hey, #shehaditcoming.


    



O problema com o @HistoryInPics

Aposto que você, de uma maneira de outra, já se deparou com um novo tipo de fenômeno no Twitter: fotos históricas.

Com quase 1 milhão de seguidores, o perfil @HistoryInPics publica dezenas de imagens do passado com breves descrições em 140 caracteres. Tais tweets já atraíram a atenção de celebridades, que ajudam a engordar a alta média de compartilhamentos das publicações. Cada foto é retweetada cerca de 1.600 vezes, e favoritada por 1.800 pessoas. O sucesso, obviamente, gerou clones, como @HistoryInPix, @HistoricalPics, @HistoryPics, entre outros.

Em uma recente matéria, o The Atlantic descobriu que o @HistoryInPics é mantido por dois adolescentes: Xavier Di Petta, 17 anos, que vive na Austrália, e Kyle Cameron, 19, um estudante no Havaí. E que esse não é o único empreendimento deles. Ambos tem pelo menos outros cinco perfis populares no Twitter, como o @EarthPix, com taxas de engajamento que muitas marcas matariam para conseguir.

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Essa tendência, porém, apresenta dois problemas. O primeiro é a questão da atribuição de autoria das fotos. Os tweets desses perfis históricos não trazem créditos, muito menos um link para quem quiser saber mais. Os criadores do @HistoryInPics se defendem dizendo que as imagens são de domínio público, que os autores que se sentirem lesados podem solicitar a exclusão do tweets, e que também não estão ganhando dinheiro com o perfil.

Compartilhar nunca exigiu tanta responsabilidade

É difícil comprar esse último argumento, já que Di Petta é dono de uma empresa que vende "soluções em mídias sociais", chamada Swift Fox Labs. E mesmo que as imagens não sejam mais protegidas pelas leis de copyright, colocar créditos não dói. Os críticos do perfil já fizeram até paródia: @AhistoricalPics.

O outro problema, na minha opinião, é ainda mais grave: muitas das fotos publicadas por esses perfis são falsas. Melhor dizendo: não correspondem com o fato mencionado no tweet. Como apontou Sarah Werner em seu blog, uma das imagens mais viralizadas pelo @HistoryInPics é essa abaixo, em que Nikola Tesla supostamente está trabalhando como instrutor de natação. Apesar da semelhança física, não é Tesla na foto.

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Matt Novak, do Paleofuture, desmente essa e outras imagens publicadas por diversos perfis e sites do tipo, nos posts 7 Fun Facts That Are Total Lies e 7 (More) Fun Facts That Are Total Lies, mostrando porque não podemos sempre confiar nessas curiosidades que se espalham como praga pelas redes sociais.

Precisaremos aprender a nos defender de tanta desinformação

Falta de crédito e inveracidade. O @HistoryInPics e seus clones exemplificam bem essas duas grandes desonestidades que atingem boa parte do conteúdo atualmente gerado na internet, seja por má fé ou incompetência, amplificadas pelo alcance e praticidade das ferramentas online.

Porém, não são questões restritas apenas ao fenômeno da contas históricas de Twitter, mas também na corrida por cliques que acaba fazendo jornais publicarem informações sem apurar a verdade, como os recentes casos do painel que exibe o pôr do sol na China, e do menino dormindo entre os túmulos dos pais na Síria. Sim, você viu isso no Facebook, compartilhado por pessoas que você admira e confia, que, por sua vez, confiaram em instituições jornalísticas.

O cenário me soa desolador, não importando se são adolescentes tuitando ou grandes jornais com milhares de funcionários. Com a oferta sem precedentes de conteúdo e a busca a qualquer custo por popularidade, precisaremos aprender a nos defender de tanta desinformação, já que compartilhar nunca exigiu tanta responsabilidade.

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Arby’s Slayed the Grammys With This Tweet About Pharrell Williams’ Hat

If there was one big winner at last night's Grammy Awards that was even more surprising than Daft Punk getting Album of the Year, it was Arby's scoring the tweet of the night.

The sandwich chain's post about Daft Punk collaborator Pharrell Williams' sartorial selection ("Hey @Pharrell, can we have our hat back?") was a responsive-marketing coup de grâce, with 75,000 retweets and more than 40,000 favorites by Monday morning.

To be sure, jokes about Pharrell's hat, which looked borrowed from Smokey Bear, had been flying around Twitter for more than an hour before Arby's made its post. But man, what a post.

Many marketers attempted to tie their brand messaging in with the Grammys, but as you can see in Digiday's roundup, few succeeded. Arby's even merited praise from global brands like Pepsi and Hyundai, which is an odd new level of meta marketing.

But when it comes to responsive marketing to celebrity antics, the best a brand can hope for is a response from A-lister him- or herself. And that's exactly what Arby's got in the early hours of this morning, when Pharrell asked on Twitter, "Y'all tryna start a roast beef?"


    



Should Yahoo Really Have Apologized to Google for Mocking Outage?

When Google services go down, apparently no one wins. Case in point: Competitor Yahoo is being called a coward for deleting tweets that mocked today's global Gmail outage.

"Earlier today, a tweet that reflected bad judgment was posted and has been deleted," Yahoo noted via Twitter around 4:30 Eastern today. "We apologize to @Google and the @Gmail team."

While the original tweet simply said "Gmail is temporarily unavailable" with a screenshot of Gmail's access error, Yahoo put salt in the wound by continuing to tweet the same message at least four times in parody of the ongoing outage.

Instead of being praised for a change of heart and good sportsmanship, Yahoo quickly felt the tide of criticism turn against the company. Some responses accused Yahoo of merely wanting to avoid looking like a hypocrite if it faces its own email outage in the future, while others simply said the retraction was "laaaaammme."

Below you can see one of Yahoo's original tweets and some of the many responses to its apology.

(Screenshot via Marketing Land.)


    



Redefining Luxury, the 2014 Wienermoble Is Now Available for Lease

My dream of hogging the road in a 27-foot-long, 14,000-pound frankfurter could finally become a reality if I win Oscar Mayer's contest to let someone "lease" a 2014 Wienermobile for a day.

McGarryBowen touts the promotion in an amusing spoof of a luxury car ad tagged "Form. Meats. Function." Potential leaseholders are asked to tweet with the hashtag #Tweet2Lease to explain why they are worthy—or as the ad puts it in dealership pricing terms, "1 tweet and 140 characters down." 

Per Wienermobile regulations, you get to ride in the huge hot dog, but not actually drive it, but looking at the entries, it's clear that most are dreaming of getting behind the wheel instead of just riding sausage-shotgun.

So far, the contest tweets are a mixed bag. @ForeverZoe1 claims, "I deserve to drive the wienermobile to Prom," while @piggiepi pleads, "Can I please have the biggest wiener for one day?" My favorite, via @stevierut, is dripping with brandcentric sarcasm: "I have 176 followers and they're all VERY influential opinion leaders." Then there's this inevitable, if no longer particularly timely bon mot from @AdverTina: "I want 2 use the @Wienermobile 2 visit @anthonyweiner's house."

Don't strain too hard to compose the perfect 140 characters or fret over endless (and in most cases, utterly predictable) puns. The lucky wiener … er, winner will be chosen at random on Feb. 7.


    



Derrick Coleman Writes Amazing Letter to Hearing-Impaired Girl Who Liked His Ad

Derrick Coleman's recent ad for Duracell made him one of the most admired players in the NFL, and with one handwritten letter, he just proved he was worthy of all the praise.

This week, a father of hearing-impaired twin girls tweeted a letter written by one of his daughters to Coleman, a Seattle Seahawk whose lifelong struggle with deafness was chronicled in an incredible TV spot from Saatchi & Saatchi, New York.

Instead of simply tweeting a quick reply, Coleman handwrote a letter and then shared a photo of it with the father, saying: "Your girls are awesome! Read them my letter back when you can! Thank you for the support! Means a lot!"

The story has quickly escalated Coleman's reputation even further, and this morning the girls and their father were featured on Good Morning America. Check out the letters and original ad below.

Via Reddit.


    



ZzzQuil Gets Awkward With MLK Day Tweet

In yet another example of why brands might just want to sit out serious events instead of posting "topical" social media updates, sleep aid ZzzQuil is being hammered on Twitter today for a post about Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The tweet wasn't patently offensive, to be sure, but it was definitely an awkward brand connection: "Today is the day for dreaming. Happy MLK Day."

As you can see below, the social media backlash began quickly, especially after being mocked by comedian Tim Heidecker. The brand account has tried defending the post, telling one critic, "Yikes, I gather you disagree with brands posting on such a significant day. No disrespect was intended."

Check out more reactions below.


    

Jelly: Biz Stone, fundador do Twitter, lança novo aplicativo

Jelly

O fundador do Twitter, Biz Stone, lançou hoje um novo aplicativo: Jelly.

Pretende funcionar como um mecanismo de busca humano. Você faz perguntas através do aplicativo, e espera as resposta de sua rede. Aí você quer saber: Qual a diferença de fazer a mesma perguntar pelo próprio Twitter? Bem, o Jelly tem a proposta de ser mais visual, com a publicação de questões através de imagens.

O app tem design apurado e conta com uma equipe de renome, mas difícil dizer qual é o futuro dessa ideia se pensarmos no que é o Yahoo! Respostas, por exemplo, ou até mesmo no Quora. O atrativo das imagens parece pouco convincente.

No vídeo acima, o próprio Biz Stone explica sua criação. O Jelly está disponível para download gratuito para iOS e Android.

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Jelly

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Studio Prints a Single Tweet in Full-Page New York Times Ad for Inside Llewyn Davis

The media revolution has come full circle.

To promote Inside Llewyn Davis as Hollywood awards season ramps up, CBS Films paid The New York Times a lot of money to run a full-page print ad on Saturday consisting of mostly white space and an abbreviated version of a tweet from Times movie critic A.O. Scott praising the Coen Brothers' folk-singer flick. "I'm gonna listen to the Llewyn Davis album again. Fare thee well my honeys," said Scott's tweet.

After the ad ran, Scott wrote, also on Twitter:

Why bother abbreviating a tweet for a print ad, you might wonder? Because the rest of the tweet name checked The Wolf of Wall Street and American Hustle:

According to Mashable, the Academy considers it a no-no for movie ads to mention the work of competitors.

It's a good strategy insofar as it'll earn more attention than the run-of-the-mill movie ad quoting a gushy critic. Beyond the buzz it invites among marketing and social-media geeks, who are sweating whether the use violates Twitter's rules by including content from the platform in advertising without the author's permission, it's really just another newspaper ad—meaning nobody really knows how effective it will be.

The studio's execs missed an opportunity to amp up Twitter enthusiasts further, though, by throwing an "MT" into the layout. Maybe they worried that most of the audience reading the Times in print barely knows what a Twitter is anyways.


    

Leave It to Ben & Jerry’s to Write the Best Tweet About Colorado’s New Marijuana Law

On Jan. 1, Colorado became the first state to allow the sale of recreational marijuana to anyone 21 or older. Sales have become so successful that stores are unable to keep up with the demand. Ben & Jerry's acknowledged that with a tweet on Thursday.

It was retweeted close to 10,000 times, and we're surprised more brands haven't addressed Colorado's newfound freedom. It seems like an appropriate time for Kate Upton and Snoop Dogg's weird Hot Pockets' commercial—full of references to marijuana "I bake everywhere!"—to get some extra play in the Centennial State, or for Taco Bell to revive its "Late Night Munchies" jingle.

And Doritos, Cheetos and Funyuns—we're waiting, you guys.

Via Mashable.


    

Qual marca teria coragem de fazer piada no Twitter sobre a maconha do Colorado?

Atuar nas mídias sociais com senso de oportunidade tem se mostrado crucial para se destacar na multidão. Porém, muitas vezes as marcas exageram, e na busca de cliques a qualquer custo, publicam no Facebook, Twitter e afins mensagens completamente inadequadas.

Sendo assim, qual grande empresa teria coragem de brincar com a recente liberação da maconha no Colorado, Estados Unidos? Sugerir isso para algum cliente certamente causaria imediatos olhares de reprovação, mas a Ben & Jerry’s fez, e fez de forma brilhante.

A marca de sorvetes, que pertence a Unilever, publicou no Twitter uma mensagem bem humorada:

“BREAKING NEWS: Ouvimos relatos de que Ben & Jerry’s esgotou nas lojas do Colorado. O que aconteceu?”

A brincadeira rendeu até agora quase 5 mil retweets.

/foto de destaque por Getty Images

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Sharks Now Tweet When Approaching the Beach

It used to be that when you wanted to warn ocean-goers about shark-infested waters, the only solution was to send a panicked Roy Scheider running down the beaches. But this system largely proved unscalable, particularly after the Jaws star died in 2008.

Thankfully, Twitter is up to the task. A group called Surf Life Saving Western Australia has connected transmitters on tagged sharks to an automated Twitter warning system. The resulting tweets (see examples below) warn surfers and beachgoers about the size, breed and location of sharks that come within a kilometer of the shore.

According to The Drum, about 320 sharks are tagged, and the information provided from their transmitters was previously reported by newspaper or radio, creating a considerable delay in getting the information to those who need it.

"You might not have got some of that information until the following day in which case the hazard has long gone and the information might not be relevant," program coordinator Chris Peck told Sky News. "Now it's instant information."

Along with automated detection, the service also includes manually reported shark sightings:


    

IAC’s PR Chief Apparently Tweeted a Bizarrely Tasteless Joke About AIDS and Africa

UPDATE 4: (3:56 p.m., Dec. 22): Justine Sacco has written a public apology, noting, "Words cannot express how sorry I am, and how necessary it is for me to apologize to the people of South Africa, who I have offended due to a needless and careless tweet." 

UPDATE 3 (5:35 p.m., Dec. 21): IAC says it has fired Justine Sacco.

UPDATE 2 (12:24 a.m., Dec. 21): Justine Sacco's Twitter account appears to have been deleted. Meanwhile, her tweet had become a trending topic of global discussion, with brands and Web celebrities alike joining in the fray.

UPDATE: A rep for IAC tells Valleywag: "This is an outrageous, offensive comment that does not reflect the views and values of IAC. Unfortunately, the employee in question is unreachable on an international flight, but this is a very serious matter and we are taking appropriate action."

Original item below:

If Justine Sacco is on a flight to Africa right now, I don't envy her the notifications that will be waiting for her when she lands. 

Sacco, senior director of corporate communications at the massive digital holding company IAC, apparently tweeted the following earlier today: "Going to Africa. Hope I don't get AIDS. Just kidding. I'm white!"

The tweet has since attracted scorn and disbelief from Silicon Valley and far beyond. IAC is no small player in the digital realm. The company owns many popular websites, including About.com, Match.com, Vimeo, CollegeHumor, OkCupid and Urbanspoon.

Of course, this is the Internet, where things aren't always what they seem. The @JustineSacco Twitter account appears to be legitimate, though anyone could theoretically have gotten ahold of her phone and posted the message.

That said, many have been digging through her earlier tweets and pointing out messages like this one from January of this year: 

We've reached out to Sacco for comment and will update this item if we hear back.


    

Did Xbox Really Ask Its Own Support Account for Hardware Help on Twitter?

If true, this is rather embarrassing. Several Twitter users last night reportedly caught @Xbox tweeting an Xbox One support question to Microsoft's own @XboxSupport team. The assumption, of course, is that the question (now deleted) was meant to be posted elsewhere, with some theorizing it was intended for a fake user account to make Xbox Support look responsive.

"Hi @XboxSupport. I just got an Xbox One and connected my Kinect," the tweet says, "but it (sic) showing me that its (sic) not connected up in the rt hand corner. help!"

Proving the legitimacy of a deleted tweet is, of course, rather difficult. But more than one user snagged a screenshot at different times with different amounts of retweets and favorites, meaning that if it was faked, it was faked by multiple people in multiple screenshots. The screenshot above was posted to Reddit, where it became one of this morning's top posts. Another was posted to Neogaf, and a third is shown below.

We've reached out to Microsoft for clarification. 


    

Brands, Web Celebrities and Anonymous Join Global Mockery of PR Pro’s AIDS Tweet

UPDATE: Despite an overwhelmingly positive response from Twitter users, Gogo has apologized for its tweet making fun of Justine Sacco:

Original item below:

By the time her tweet mocking AIDS in Africa had been deleted tonight (followed shortly by her entire Twitter account), corporate PR director Justine Sacco had already become more than a target of public loathing. She had become a hashtag. 

#HasJustineLandedYet was popping up across Twitter as word spread faster than an intercontinental jet about the IAC spokeswoman's tweet, "Going to Africa. Hope I don't get AIDS. Just kidding. I'm white!"

And in a marketing coup de grace so pointed it's almost painful, Gogo in-flight Internet used Sacco's lengthy silence as an example of why you really need to use Gogo in-flight Internet: "Next time you plan to tweet something stupid before you take off, make sure you are getting on a @Gogo flight! CC: @JustineSacco."

Here's the original tweet:

And here's a sample of a few other tweets of note arising from Sacco's situation:


    

Inside Twitter Office

Situés dans un bâtiment de 1937 dans le style Art deco à San Francisco, les locaux de Twitter proposent des espaces superbes et ont été conçus par IA Interior Architects et avec Lundberg Design. Une structure de 11 étapes proposant aux équipes d’avoir des espaces encourageant le travail et la bonne entente.

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Twitter lança sua retrospectiva de 2013

YouTube, Facebook, Foursquare e Yahoo! já fizeram as suas retrospectivas, e hoje foi a vez do Twitter repassar os principais acontecimentos de 2013.

O resumo foi dividido em 5 categorias: #2013, #notícias, #entretenimento, #esportes, e #showcase. Dentro de cada uma delas, você pode navegar pelas subcategorias, organizadas por datas ou temas. Todas são auto-explicativas, já a aba #showcase traz uma seleção do melhores tweets do ano, segundo a própria rede social.

Dá uma olhada: 2013.twitter.com

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DiGiorno Pizza Live-Tweeted The Sound of Music, and It Was Very Tasty

On Thursday night, as millions tuned in to see Carrie Underwood ambitiously take on the role of Maria von Trapp, croon about the hills being alive, and make children's clothing out of drapes in NBC's The Sound of Music Live, DiGiorno Pizza was also watching—and live-tweeted the whole thing. The Nestlé brand's tweets were funny and hilariously pizza-related. Let's have a moment of appreciation for how difficult a task that must have been, considering The Sound of Music heavily features a convent and also the Third Reich. Also, a solid nod of respect to whomever came up with the hashtag #DiGiorNOYOUDIDNT.