The power of Twitter
16th October 2009 by Jason C. Filed under: Blogging
The other day, the Guardian reported that it had been gagged from reporting on a parliamentary question, to be asked in the commons. It couldn’t say who had issued the “gagging order” (a.k.a. a “super injunction”), why it had been issued, and could only sneak out the fact that it existed because it was about parliamentary business.
This went out on a few high profile blogs, and spread from there. Eventually, after a few hours, the reason for the gag came out – I read about it first on Twitter. It was about a company that had dumped toxic waste off the Ivory Coast. Within hours, the name of the company and their solicitors (Trafigura and Carter-Ruck, respectively) were some of the most used words on Twitter. The culmination of all this attention was that Carter-Ruck withdrew their injunction, because of the huge publicity it was bringing to the story.
And that is the story of how Twitter broke a super-injunction. You can read a more full story here with a very nice visualisation of the story as it developed. Not bad considering most of the stuff on Twitter is about what some stranger’s cat’s had for dinner.



by banki
on 7th January 2011 at 1:51 pm:
Thanks for sharing! It’s a pity that it’s short:)