Thursday
Oct082009
  
  
  
  Green Tweets: Mapping Iran's Movement via Twitter
 Thursday, October 8, 2009 at 11:17
Thursday, October 8, 2009 at 11:17 
  
        
        
        
          The Latest from Iran (8 October): Will There Be a Fight?
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 Our colleague Ali Fisher, who writes the excellent blog Wandren PD on public diplomacy and new media, has unveiled the first results from his study of the interaction of Twitter users with post-election protest in Iran. Writing for the USC Center on Public Diplomacy, he has mapped the conversation around the tags #GR88, #FreeIran, #Neda, and #Sohrab as well as the tag #helpiranelection (which I did not know about and was apparently created by a software developer in Israel).
Our colleague Ali Fisher, who writes the excellent blog Wandren PD on public diplomacy and new media, has unveiled the first results from his study of the interaction of Twitter users with post-election protest in Iran. Writing for the USC Center on Public Diplomacy, he has mapped the conversation around the tags #GR88, #FreeIran, #Neda, and #Sohrab as well as the tag #helpiranelection (which I did not know about and was apparently created by a software developer in Israel).
As promising as this study is, the potential for it is even greater. As Fisher notes, "[The tag] #IranElection had so much data that a user would have had to scan 1,000 tweets every hour to keep up."
    
  Receive our latest updates by email or RSS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FEED
Buy Us A Cup of Coffee? Help Enduring America Expand Its Coverage and Analysis
 Our colleague Ali Fisher, who writes the excellent blog Wandren PD on public diplomacy and new media, has unveiled the first results from his study of the interaction of Twitter users with post-election protest in Iran. Writing for the USC Center on Public Diplomacy, he has mapped the conversation around the tags #GR88, #FreeIran, #Neda, and #Sohrab as well as the tag #helpiranelection (which I did not know about and was apparently created by a software developer in Israel).
Our colleague Ali Fisher, who writes the excellent blog Wandren PD on public diplomacy and new media, has unveiled the first results from his study of the interaction of Twitter users with post-election protest in Iran. Writing for the USC Center on Public Diplomacy, he has mapped the conversation around the tags #GR88, #FreeIran, #Neda, and #Sohrab as well as the tag #helpiranelection (which I did not know about and was apparently created by a software developer in Israel).As promising as this study is, the potential for it is even greater. As Fisher notes, "[The tag] #IranElection had so much data that a user would have had to scan 1,000 tweets every hour to keep up."
tagged   Ali Fisher,
Ali Fisher,   Iran,
Iran,   Iran Elections 2009,
Iran Elections 2009,   Twitter,
Twitter,   Wandren PD  in
Wandren PD  in   Middle East & Iran
Middle East & Iran  
      
     Ali Fisher,
Ali Fisher,   Iran,
Iran,   Iran Elections 2009,
Iran Elections 2009,   Twitter,
Twitter,   Wandren PD  in
Wandren PD  in   Middle East & Iran
Middle East & Iran  







 As we write regularly on public diplomacy, we noted the latest entry by our colleague Ali Fisher
As we write regularly on public diplomacy, we noted the latest entry by our colleague Ali Fisher