Skip to main content

Twitter invests $10 million in MIT social media research lab

how to use Twitter
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Twitter has just invested $10 million in the creation a special lab that’ll be used to analyse the way people use social media.

The team working at the new Laboratory of Social Machines at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will have full access to Twitter’s public stream of tweets in real time, together with the archive of every single message tweeted since the service kicked off over eight years ago. That’s a whole lot of research material to be getting on with.

Recommended Videos

The five-year project has a variety of aims, including to better understand how particular kinds of messages travel and spread throughout social media platforms, and also to get a more complete picture of the different ways in which people use such services to engage with one another and share information.

At the same time, the team plans to create new collaborative tools and mobile apps “to enable new forms of public communication and social organization,” Alexandra Kahn of MIT’s Media Lab  said in a release this week. Researchers also hope to build new platforms for individuals and institutions “to identify, discuss, and act on pressing societal problems,” Kahn said.

Related: Twitter opens its stats dashboard to all users

Commenting on the launch of the new project, Deb Roy, an associate professor at the Media Lab and Twitter’s chief media scientist, said the lab intends to “experiment in areas of public communication and social organization where humans and machines collaborate on problems that can’t be solved manually or through automation alone.”

Despite putting millions of dollars into the initiative, Twitter won’t have any direct influence on the type of work the lab carries out, though it will be able to utilize the research results once they’re made available.

Twitter CEO Dick Costolo said his company’s investment will allow it to “seize the opportunity to go deeper into research to understand the role Twitter and other platforms play in the way people communicate, the effect that rapid and fluid communication can have and apply those findings to complex societal issues.”

[MIT]

Topics
Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Trump signs executive order targeting social media companies
President Trump Issues Executive Order Against Social Media Companies

President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday targeting social media platforms, pushing to make them liable for content posted onto their sites, and ordering the Federal Trade Commission and the attorney general to begin investigating the companies.

"Today, I am signing an executive order to protect and uphold the free speech and rights of the American people," Trump said at the signing.

Read more
Trump plans executive order targeting social media after Twitter fact-check spat
Trump Twitter

After threatening to regulate or even shut down social media networks, President Donald Trump plans to sign an executive order on social media, the White House said. What that exactly means, however, remains unclear.

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany told reporters that the executive order would come on Thursday, but provided no additional details.

Read more
Trump threatens to shut down social media platforms
Donald Trump

U.S. President Donald Trump early on Wednesday morning threatened to "strongly regulate" or shut down social media platforms after Twitter fact-checked him for the first time.

https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1265601611310739456

Read more