A couple of weeks ago we posted about Track Spam. In that scenario (the @mytweets spammer), the victims of the spam were anyone who was tracking the hashtags that the spammer injected into their tweets. Yesterday Steve Gillmor (Gillmor Gang) was victimized by a more targeted version of Track Spam. Steve uses the GTalk client to read his Twitter stream and he makes extensive use of the track command to see tweets that are addressed to him and any tweets that mention him by name. So what’s the problem? In the past couple of days, someone on Twitter has sent a flurry of annoying tweets to Steve. Because she is using his name (@stevegillmor) in the tweets, these tweets are showing up in Steve’s Twitter stream, even though Steve isn’t following this person. Right now, there is nothing he can do to put a stop to this short of untracking his name, which would make Twitter almost useless to him. Even blocking this person won’t stop those tweets from polluting his Twitter stream.
This whole controversy was captured on yesterday’s NewsGang Live. It starts a few minutes in and goes on for more than an hour. Warning - it is VERY painful to listen to. The person who has been targeting Steve is on the call and she constantly cuts off anyone who tries to engage in the discussion with her.
There is a discussion thread on Get Satisfaction about this “hole” in the Track feature. If you have an opinion about this, please go to that thread and follow it.
Update:
This thread on Get Satisfaction is more active.



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