Tagged with Social media

Twitter: Chinese whispers gone wrong?

This week I’m back at Red, helping out for two weeks and hopefully getting some work done on my dissertation.

Around lunchtime today we all received an email flagged as ‘high importance’ that informed us there had been a shooting at Oxford Circus, and the gunmen were on the loose.

rumour160304Following such an email, we were asked to remain inside until the ‘all clear’ had been given, or the email had been proven as a hoax.

I immediately decided to investigate, Googling the shootings, checking BBC News and Sky News to see if this ‘breaking news’ had been broadcast. There was nothing.

Twitter however was a very different story. Every few seconds the same messages were retweeted "shooting in Oxford Circus" "gunmen on the loose, stay safe" etc. etc.  People everywhere had picked up on the story, and thanks to the retweet function, broadcast it for their own followers to see.

It’s easy to see how it got out of control- but where did it come from, and was it true? Well the simplest answer first- no, it wasn’t true. But who would make that up, and why?

The first ‘theory’ pinpointed the story to ASOS, or poor Candice Bailey to be exact. Her tweet, as seen below, was apparently misconstrued in a bizarre Chinese whispers style chain of events.

tweet

Now to me, this is quite obviously about some kind of filming for ASOS and Diet Coke- so did someone really see this and think ‘Oh my god, people are being shot in Oxford Circus, I must immediately send out a mass email to everyone in a 5 mile radius AND alert Twitter’?

Personally, I hope not. If it is true that this is the origin of the whole debate, I think perhaps a mischievous little ‘so and so’ may have altered the message and passed it on.

However, official reports tell a different story. The Evening Standard reported a policed training document had somehow been leaked and misinterpreted.

A Met spokesman said: "We can confirm that there has been no firearms incident in Oxford Street today. It would appear that some information about a routine police training exercise being held today has inadvertently got into the public domain.

"As part of that exercise, participants have been given a hypothetical written scenario which involved an armed incident on Oxford Street. We would like to reaffirm that this is a training exercise only."

Mass panic and concern hit the nation within minutes, if not seconds. Should this perhaps come as a warning for us all to rely less on social media and revert back to more traditional outlets for breaking news, or is this simply just a small blip in the system?

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The ethics of blogging

Over the Christmas holidays I have been bombarded with essays, assignments, group work, application forms and exams, so it is somewhat obvious that I have not had a lot of time on my hands to blog.  Bizarrely this has left me feeling guilty, like I am somehow depriving my (albeit few) readers of my views and opinions.  But this is surely not the case; there are so many blogs out there that it has become very difficult to keep up with them all (just try working your way through feed demon having left it for a week) and therefore blogs who don’t have frequent posts can just fall behind. This doesn’t seem to be a major problem, all blogs can be picked up again when time allows, so where is this feeling of guilt coming from?

After thinking this over whilst not being able to sleep last night (insomnia is a wonderful thing isn’t it?) I realised the pressure I appear to be feeling about my lack of posting comes from the overwhelming amount of posts written by others.  There are blogs I visit that have up to eight posts a day and I’m aware other blogs have even more; but what is the reason for this? 

Personally I blog when there is a reason to, when I want to have a little rant about something or offer helpful tips to other students for example.  I never blog for the simple sake of blogging.  I can’t help but wonder if others do? 

 In my opinion blogging should serve the purpose of an online diary, personal to you whilst providing interesting and insightful reading for others.  It should not be “oh crap I haven’t written one in a while”, “”what will people think of me if I don’t?” or ”I don’t want to lose subscribers” posts.  These tend to be rather obvious, dull and frankly pointless.  Bloggers need to stop worrying about their number of subscribers and Technorati rankings and just write what they think- it really will be a lot more enjoyable to read than the “oops, sorry I haven’t written in a while” post.

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Placements

Having recently started a placement at the Leeds based social media company Wolfstar, I’ve been inspired to continue my blog! The placement is ongoing, and so far I’ve loved it, everyone is friendly and fun and the company has some great ideas! They’ve welcomed me into the team with open arms and I’m incredibly grateful for that (some placements can seem a little daunting to say the least!) Although I’m not yet completely social media savvy, I’m starting to get to grips with it, and hoping to learn more about the benefits of web 2.0 and WOM as my time at Wolfstar continues! 

This past week has been a bit hectic for me, I’ve been up to Newcastle, back to Leeds then straight down to London! I headed “daaaarrn Saaaf” (my attempt at putting “down south” in a southern accent…) on Thursday to meet Michael Sandler of financial PR company Hudson Sandler.  After a brief meeting, I had set up a two week placement for August which I think will give me a good insight into the world of financial PR.  Who knows, it might be the one for me!

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