Thursday, 31 December 2015

Politwoops is back to show you all the embarrassing tweets politicians delete

Jack-dorsey
Feed-twFeed-fb

Twitter has a message for politicians: You can delete tweets, but you can't hide.

Politwoops, a tool developed by the Sunlight Foundation that archives the tweets politicians fire off and then quickly delete, is back after a seven-month hiatus. The tool went dark earlier this year after Twitter removed Politwoops' access to the API on June 3, stopping the ability to track deleted tweets.

A release from Twitter announcing the service's return quoted CEO Jack Dorsey from a conference in October:

We have a responsibility to communicate our roadmap in a clear and transparent way to everyone in this community. We have a responsibility to have an open dialogue with you to make sure we are serving you in the best way. We have a responsibility to continue to empower organizations that bring more transparency to public dialogue, such as Politwoops. We need to make sure we are serving all these organizations and developers in the best way, because that is what will make Twitter great. We need to listen, we need to learn, and we need to have this conversation with you. We want to start that today. Read more...

More about Twitter, Politics, Social Media, and 2016 Election

2016 Social Media Marketing Predictions From the Experts

ldj-social-media-predictions-560

Are you looking for the hot marketing trends coming in 2016? Do you want to know where social media pros are focusing their attention? In 2015, new platforms made a big splash and several popular networks monetized. To get you ready for what’s coming next, we asked 14 social media marketing experts what to watch [...]

This post 2016 Social Media Marketing Predictions From the Experts first appeared on .
- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Related Questions Grow +500% in 5 Months

Posted by Dr-Pete

Earlier this year, Google rolled out the Related Questions feature (AKA "People Also Ask"). If you haven't seen them yet, related questions appear in an expandable box, mixed in with organic results. Here's an example from a search for "Samsung Galaxy S6":

If you click on any question, it expands into something that looks like a Featured Snippet:

Currently, Related Questions can occur in packs of between 1–4 questions and answers. Here's an example of a box with only one question, on a search for "lederhosen":

Once expanded, a typical answer contains a machine-generated snippet, a link to the source website, and a link to the Google search for the question.

How common are related questions?

We started tracking Related Questions in late July on the MozCast 10K, where they originally appeared on roughly 1.3% of queries. Keep in mind that the MozCast set tends toward commercial queries, and the absolute percentage may not represent the entire web. What's interesting, though, is what happened after that. Here's a graph of Related Questions prevalence since the end of July:

You can clearly see two spikes in the graph — one measured on October 27th, and one on December 1st. As of this writing (December 10th), Related Questions appeared on about 8.1% of the queries we track. In less than 5 months, Related Questions have increased 501%. This is a much faster adoption rate than other Knowledge Graph features.

Where do the answers come from?

When you expand a question, the answer looks a lot like another recent Knowledge Graph addition — Featured Snippets. Digging deeper, though, it appears that the connection is indirect at best. For example, here's an expanded question on a search for "monopoly":

If you click on that search, though, you get a SERP with the following Featured Snippet:

It's interesting to note that both answers come from Investopedia, but Google is taking completely different text from two different URLs on the same site. With Featured Snippets, we know that the answer currently has to come from a site already ranking on page one, but with Related Questions, there's no clear connection to organic results. These answers don't seem tied to their respective SERPs.

Where do the questions come from?

It's clear that both the answers in Related Questions and the snippets in Featured Snippets are machine-generated. Google is expanding the capabilities of the Knowledge Graph by extracting answers directly from the index. What may not be as clear, at first glance, is that machines are also generating the questions themselves. Look at the following example, from a search for "grammar check":

Out of context, the question doesn't even make sense. Expanded, you can see that it relates to a very specific grammar question posted on Quora. While the topic is relevant, no human would attach this question, as worded, to this search. Consider another example, for "cover letter examples":

The first and last question are obviously, to a human, redundant. To a machine, though, they would look unique. To be fair, Google has come a long way in a short time — even a couple of months ago, some of these questions were riddled with grammar and spelling errors. As of this writing, I can't find a single example of either.

Finally, there are the questions that no human would ever ask:

No rational human would ever want to know what kind of meat is in a gyro. It's better that way.

What's coming next?

It's clear that Google is rapidly expanding their capability to generate questions and answers from the index. Both Featured Snippets and Related Questions have evolved considerably since their respective launches, and Google's ability to understand natural language queries and semantic data is growing daily. It may be months before we fully understand if and how these results cannibalize organic clicks, but it seems very clear that Google no longer considers these features to be experimental and will be aggressively pushing forward question-and-answer style SERPs in the near future.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

Snapchat for Business: A Guide for Marketers

kh-snapchat-business-560

Have you heard of Snapchat? Want to use it to connect with your customers? Snapchat is a mobile app that lets you send public or private snaps of images and video to people from your smartphone. In this article, you’ll discover how to use Snapchat‘s features to connect with your customers. The Snapchat Demographic Before [...]

This post Snapchat for Business: A Guide for Marketers first appeared on .
- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

Indian startups, academicians join the chorus against Facebook's Free Basics

Ap_6792642472611
Feed-twFeed-fb

In light of the ongoing debate over Facebook's Free Basics platform, nine major Indian startups have written to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), voicing their concern over zero rating and Internet gate-keepers. They were joined by nearly 80 Indian academicians who released a statement on the flaws in Free Basics. Taking note, TRAI has extended its deadline for comments on differential data pricing to Jan. 7.

The TRAI petition was sent by entrepreneurs from prominent startups such as Zomato, Paytm, TrulyMadly, GoQii, Mouthshut, Flipclass, Teesort, SVG Media and Tevis Learning, in response to TRAI's consultation paper on differential pricing for data services Read more...

More about Facebook, India, Net Neutrality, Social Media, and Internet.Org

Facebook is testing multiple, interest-based news feeds

Facebook3
Feed-twFeed-fb

Your Facebook News Feed might become a whole lot more diverse soon

The company is testing customizable, topical feeds. The new feature, currently available only to a small subset of users, lets you choose between a general News Feed as well as a feed focused on travel, style or recent news headlines, for example

First noticed by Jason Stein, who tweeted about it Tuesday, the feature is only available on Facebook's mobile app

Facebook is adding customizable interest-based feeds. A newspaper made up of all the world's newspaperspic.twitter.com/Ll7pib6Mb5

— Jason Stein (@jasonwstein) December 29, 2015 Read more...

More about Facebook, News Feed, Social Media, and No Lead Image Template

Tuesday, 29 December 2015

Twitter’s new rules explicitly crack down on ‘hateful conduct’

Twitter-abuse-policy
Feed-twFeed-fb

Twitter announced an update to its rules that clarify what the social media company considers "abusive behavior and hateful conduct."

Megan Cristina, Twitter's director of Trust and Safety, made the announcement Tuesday in a post that said the company will not tolerate behavior designed to harass, intimidate or silence another user's voice through fear

"As always, we embrace and encourage diverse opinions and beliefs — but we will continue to take action on accounts that cross the line into abuse," Cristina wrote

We've updated our rules around abuse and hateful conduct https://t.co/XGBETsUk5h

— Safety (@safety) December 29, 2015 Read more...

More about Twitter, Social Media, Privacy, and Abuse