Sifting Authorities From Celebrities On Twitter
holy_calamity writes "Celebrities like Britney Spears may be the 'most followed' on Twitter, but new service PeerIndex mines the content of tweets and tracks the spread of links and phrases to reveal the hidden experts in specific areas, from cloud computing to venture capital. The authorities the site finds for a given subject often have only a few hundred followers, but the content of their tweets is known to spread widely. Could data mining tools like this be the future for people or businesses looking for new collaborators, advisers and influencers?"
Only if you want collaborators, advisers and influencers that are idiots and use Twitter.
RT: @slashdot: no.
Pretty much. The idea that anyone would go to Twitter for "experts" is, well, staggering. Twitter content it pretty much Twaddle.
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
Marshall McLuhan said "The Medium is the Message" nearly half a century ago.
Stating anything in 140 character tweets give what kind of message?
Twitter is nothing but a circle jerk.
That's certainly a possibility, but tweeting a hyperlink seems like adding a superfluous layer of indirection when google and google scholar already do a pretty good job of looking up people by topic. But, to be fair, I wouldn't know if useful information can be extracted from tweets until it's done.