1128: Suddenly Silenced

Page_1While I don’t particularly relish the circumstances under which I left Twitter recently — which I won’t go into now as it’s all still a bit “raw” and upsetting, to be honest — it’s sort of been nice to not have the omniscient little blue bird hovering over my shoulder all the time.

Twitter was a big part of my life for a very long time. According to my Twitter archive — which I downloaded before I closed my account — I first posted a tweet on May 8 of 2008, but didn’t really do anything with it until the end of June of that year. It’s fair to say that I — like many other people — didn’t really “get” what it was all about to begin with, largely because it was so ill-defined and hadn’t pervaded popular culture quite as much as it has today. “It’s like Facebook statuses,” I’d say to people when trying to explain it, “but without all the other crap.”

It sort of is like Facebook statuses without all the other crap — those early tweets of mine very much followed the “Pete is… [doing something]” format — but it quickly became a lot more than that. It became one of my primary means of communication with my international friends.

As many of you reading this may know, I have a lot of friends, but disappointingly few of them live in the same place as me. I have at least rectified that a little by moving back to Southampton to be near my university and board game buddies, but many of my other friends are still scattered the world over, all the way from America to Japan and lots of places in between. It’s sort of awesome to have such a global group of friends, though it naturally means that I’ve never actually met an awful lot of them and possibly never will in some cases. It also meant that I needed a good, simple, reliable means of staying in touch with them; Facebook was all right, but as it gradually became more and more cluttered with crap, fewer and fewer people were using it as a serious means of communication. Today, it’s a bloated mess that it’s very difficult to be “heard” on, but it still has a place.

Twitter, meanwhile, was simple, pure and to the point. It was like exchanging text messages with friends, only on a global scale. I made a lot of new friends through Twitter and got to know some a bit better. I got through some tough times, too; the immediacy of the service meant that it was a good outlet for me to talk about the way I was feeling when I was going through my “difficult period” a few years back, and I appreciated the support I got from my friends — and sometimes strangers — during that dark period.

Twitter is addictive, though. It becomes a compulsion. Install it on your phone and you’ll find yourself idly opening the app to see if anyone has said anything interesting in the last two minutes, even if you just stepped away from your computer where you were staring at a Twitter client. You’ll find yourself wanting to step into (or start) conversations at silly hours in the morning, and get relatively little sleep as a result. It’ll worm its way into your life, in short, and start to take over.

Not that that’s necessarily a bad thing — as I’ve already outlined above, it proved to be a good means of communication for me, and a good means of meeting new people. It allowed me to put myself out there a lot more than I feel comfortable doing in the “real world”, and in many ways helped me to build confidence. And let’s also not forget that I met Andie through Twitter, so that’s pretty cool.

The recent things that happened to me, though, brought the service’s public nature into sharp focus. Sure you can be free to be open and honest about your feelings, your likes and dislikes, but that also means that you can be open to attack, too, without provocation. And once you’re in the sights of one of these obnoxious groups, it’s very difficult to get yourself out of them. Twitter the company aren’t much help, either — after several support messages keeping them apprised of everything that was going on, the only thing I’ve heard from them is a request for a clarification on something. They take great pains in their terms and conditions to say that they don’t mediate personal disputes — though I feel there’s a strong case for what happened to me to be considered a criminal offence, and as such I reported it to the police and intend to keep hounding Twitter until they do something about it.

In some ways, I feel sickened and angry that I was forced off a service that has been a prominent and important part of my life for a long time now. In other ways, it’s actually quite relieving to know that I don’t need to read that feed of inanities any longer, or get frustrated at people trying to have in-depth discussions on tricky issues in 140 characters when what they should really do is pen a 3,000-word blog post. I’m not ruling out a return in the future when the scumbags who drove me away give up and do something else, but for the moment I can certainly live without it — and there’s no way I’m going back to a service which I don’t feel safe using.


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