MILWAUKEE — When Milwaukee police wanted to get word of a murder out quickly, they did it in 113 characters on Twitter.
"Latest homicide in the city is NOT a random act. Male, 33, shot in 1500 block N. 39. More details as we have them,” read the recent entry.
Milwaukee’s department is one of a growing number of police and fire agencies turning to social networking Web sites such as Twitter, which lets users send text-message "tweets” to a mass audience in 140 characters or less. The tweets can be read on the Web or on mobile phones.
Some departments use Twitter to alert people to traffic disruptions, to explain why police are in a certain neighborhood or to offer crime prevention tips. Others encourage leads on more pressing matters: bomb scares, wildfires, school lockdowns and evacuations.
People signed up to automatically receive every tweet from one source are known as "followers,” and by that measure, public-safety Twitter pages are nowhere near the most popular. Cyclist Lance Armstrong and actress Demi Moore each have more than 500,000 followers. Milwaukee police have about 900.
But even nonfollowers can see the updates too, and Milwaukee police spokeswoman Anne E. Schwartz, one of two Twitterers in the department, says the site is a valuable resource.
"We are trying to reach people in the places they are already going for information,” she said.
One risk of Twitter is that anyone can go on the site and claim to be the cops. In March, the Texas attorney general’s office shut down a phony Twitter account called "Austin PD,” which had about 450 followers and used the official city seal.
The culprit has not been arrested, so his or her intent is not yet known. Mainly the tweets were in a joking vein.
But the potential for more dangerous misinformation worries Craig Mitnick, founder of Nixle LLC, which offers what it calls a secure "municipal wire” that public agencies can use instead of Twitter to broadcast updates.
Web sites like Twitter or Facebook are "meant for social purposes and not for trusted information,” Mitnick said. "It’s a bombshell waiting to explode.”
Schwartz pointed out that anyone concerned about the validity of the Milwaukee police posts on Twitter can call the department, and she said most of its posts direct readers back to the police Web site as well.
by the associated press
"Latest homicide in the city is NOT a random act. Male, 33, shot in 1500 block N. 39. More details as we have them,” read the recent entry.
Milwaukee’s department is one of a growing number of police and fire agencies turning to social networking Web sites such as Twitter, which lets users send text-message "tweets” to a mass audience in 140 characters or less. The tweets can be read on the Web or on mobile phones.
Some departments use Twitter to alert people to traffic disruptions, to explain why police are in a certain neighborhood or to offer crime prevention tips. Others encourage leads on more pressing matters: bomb scares, wildfires, school lockdowns and evacuations.
People signed up to automatically receive every tweet from one source are known as "followers,” and by that measure, public-safety Twitter pages are nowhere near the most popular. Cyclist Lance Armstrong and actress Demi Moore each have more than 500,000 followers. Milwaukee police have about 900.
But even nonfollowers can see the updates too, and Milwaukee police spokeswoman Anne E. Schwartz, one of two Twitterers in the department, says the site is a valuable resource.
"We are trying to reach people in the places they are already going for information,” she said.
One risk of Twitter is that anyone can go on the site and claim to be the cops. In March, the Texas attorney general’s office shut down a phony Twitter account called "Austin PD,” which had about 450 followers and used the official city seal.
The culprit has not been arrested, so his or her intent is not yet known. Mainly the tweets were in a joking vein.
But the potential for more dangerous misinformation worries Craig Mitnick, founder of Nixle LLC, which offers what it calls a secure "municipal wire” that public agencies can use instead of Twitter to broadcast updates.
Web sites like Twitter or Facebook are "meant for social purposes and not for trusted information,” Mitnick said. "It’s a bombshell waiting to explode.”
Schwartz pointed out that anyone concerned about the validity of the Milwaukee police posts on Twitter can call the department, and she said most of its posts direct readers back to the police Web site as well.
by the associated press
No comments:
Post a Comment