Magpie delivers sales pitches as tweets

Tweeters take note: if your friends have been tweeting about Skype, an iPod or Cisco cellphones lately, they might not be doing it because they’re concerned consumers. A service called Magpie is recruiting Twitter users to let advertisers send out messages through their accounts in exchange for cash. Twitter doesn’t release the number of active […]

Tweeters take note: if your friends have been tweeting about Skype, an iPod or Cisco cellphones lately, they might not be doing it because they’re concerned consumers.

A service called Magpie is recruiting Twitter users to let advertisers send out messages through their accounts in exchange for cash.

Twitter doesn’t release the number of active accounts, but web traffic analysis site Compete.com reports that Twitter is now the third most popular social networking service after Facebook and Myspace. Six million people visited Twitter last February.

With vast and growing armies of twitterers—and Twitter’s increasing importance as a professional networking tool—there is a concern about the transparency of what’s being peddled by sponsors rather than users.

Jessica Weber recently told her followers on Twitter about a sale at the Apple store.

“Apple has refurbished iTVs on sale,” the tweet read, complete with the punctuation lapses common to twitter users. “while supplies last. i got mine couple months ago. love it!!!”

Weber, a graphic designer from Victoria, B.C., doesn’t have an iTV.

In fact, she didn’t even write that message.

Magpie is not affiliated with Twitter. But Marshall Kirkpatrick, head writer for the tech blog ReadWriteWeb, said Magpie shows how social media could take its business model in a disturbing direction.

Online ads are nothing new, but the difference is disclosure. There’s a “presumption of authentic voice” in Twitter messages, said Kirkpatrick.

“Twitter is going to figure out how to make money someday and we all want to know how—because we might not like it.”

Many companies, including Apple, have distanced themselves from the Magpie advertisements in response to a critical post on ReadWriteWeb, saying they were designed and approved by an affiliate.

The amount of money Magpie users can earn is based on how many followers they have and what they’re tweeting about.

The Magpie site has a tool that predicts how much a Twitter user could make by signing up. It predicts that Barack Obama, who has about 831,000 followers, could make C$7,847.27 a month.

Weber, who goes by the Twitter username hippiegirljess, has 81.

In the six months Weber’s been using the service, she’s accumulated about $1.50 from corporate use of her name. Users have to make about $80 before they get paid.

Jan Schulz-Hofen, the head of Magpie, said there are more than 1,000 companies who use the service, and about 50 are Canadian. About 80,000 of the two million people who follow Magpie users on Twitter are Canadian, he said.

Weber said it doesn’t bother her that she’s essentially lying to her followers when Magpie generates tweets endorsing products she’s never used. She opted to automatically add the tag #magpie to identify tweets from advertisers.

“My followers know it’s not me,” she said..

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