INTERNET

Google, Microsoft Court Twitter as Service Suffers Outage

Oct 09, 2009 09:32 am | PC World
Twitter’s busy day: Services goes down as it talks up a deal with Google and Microsoft.
by Jacqueline Emigh

It couldn't have happened at a worse time. Micro-blogging service Twitter suffered an outage Thursday, just as it reportedly was negotiating a licensing deal with either Google or Microsoft. The up-and-down day for Twitter mirrors the service's bigger struggles as it grapples with technical SNAFUs, a business model, and its blockbuster success.

First the Downs

For much of Thursday, users could post tweets to their own streams, but updates from their followers were scarce at best. After admitting to a totally unspecified "unplanned site outage" late Wednesday, Twitter waited until almost 2 p.m. ET Thursday to elaborate on the problem. It explained in vague terms that "timelines remain stale for users." It wasn't until sites such as TechCrunch started speculating that Twitter had fallen victim to a DDOS attack that Twitter posted an official statement explaining: "The problems this morning were caused by a bug triggered by an edge case in one of the core services that powers Twitter."

At precisely 3:54 pm on Thursday, Twitter was reporting that "Most users are seeing freshly updated timelines. However, due to the previous problems, users of our SMS service may experience some missing tweets." As of about 10 pm ET on Thursday, Twitter hadn't updated its status any further. A search of Twitter.com under the "outage" search term on Thursday night yielded no new reports of user issues.

Now the Ups

Meanwhile All Things Digital reported Thursday that Twitter is in talks with both Google and Microsoft about the prospect of multimillion deals to integrate Twitter in some way with outside search engines. News agency Reuters chimed in with a report stating Twitter's discussions with Microsoft and Google are taking place separately, and that if negotiations work out, the potential partners would be able to incorporate Twitter tweets into Internet search results.

Would users actually benefit from a Twitter partnership with a major search engine? As I see it, only if the search engines were discriminating enough to combine useful information feeds from Twitter with other search results, while screening out less pertinent data about "what you're doing right now."

Still, some type of real-time Twitter trending of topic popularity could help search engines deliver more relevant results. By pairing hot tweet topics with topical search results Bing, for example, could boost relevancy in its search results. For example, nobody cares what one individual thought of a movie last night, but if a search engine could generate an instant movie thumbs up or thumbs down based on millions of tweets that could help the movie going public find a movie to see.

The Search for a Business Model, Can Google Help?

The search for some type of practical business model has been a cloud hanging over Twitter's head for some time now. Many wonder if the popular service can sustain itself without generating significant revenue. Would service outages plague Twitter if it subsisted on a shoestring budget? I suspect yes.