Twitter may turn to Apple to help distribute tweets
Tweets might appear in Spotlight searches on Apple devices, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo says
Soon, when you do a search on your iPhone for someone's contact info, a recent tweet from them might also pop up.
Twitter is working with Apple to incorporate Twitter content and accounts into Apple's Spotlight search feature, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo said during the company's quarterly earnings call on Tuesday. Spotlight search is a feature in Apple's iOS mobile system, and OS X on Macs, that generates results from content stored on the devices and from other content such as Safari Web results and mail from Apple's Mail app.
Representatives from Twitter and Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Should such a deal come to fruition, it could help Twitter distribute its content to a wider audience, which would align with the company's larger efforts to attract new users and thus improve Twitter's ability to serve them ads.
Apple's Spotlight search pulls much of its data from Apple-owned products and services, but also from outside sources like Wikipedia and Microsoft's Bing.
Tweets are already appearing in more places outside of Twitter, like in Google's search results. Earlier this year, Twitter struck a new deal with Google to give the search giant access to Twitter's firehose of content, making relevant tweets appear in people's Google search results.
Tweets will start appearing in Google search results next month, Twitter's Costolo said during the call.
Twitter reported on Tuesday it had 302 million users who log in monthly as of the end of last quarter. That's up 18 percent from a year earlier, but still less than a quarter of the size of Facebook.
Twitter's monthly user count is only one piece of how it views its potential user base. The company is also going after people who may not be logged in to Twitter or even have accounts, but who may see Twitter content like tweets elsewhere on the Web or in mobile apps. That's where deals like the one with Google, or conceivably one with Apple, would come into play.
Twitter syndication efforts also include publishing tweets from advertisers in Flipboard, a mobile news app.
Twitter faces challenges in growing its ads business among people who do not hold Twitter accounts. Currently, much of Twitter's ability to deliver targeted ads comes from the data it holds on how people use its site, and it tries to divine what they're interested in through their activities on Twitter.
Tweets might appear in Spotlight searches on Apple devices, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo says
Soon, when you do a search on your iPhone for someone's contact info, a recent tweet from them might also pop up.
Twitter is working with Apple to incorporate Twitter content and accounts into Apple's Spotlight search feature, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo said during the company's quarterly earnings call on Tuesday. Spotlight search is a feature in Apple's iOS mobile system, and OS X on Macs, that generates results from content stored on the devices and from other content such as Safari Web results and mail from Apple's Mail app.
Representatives from Twitter and Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Should such a deal come to fruition, it could help Twitter distribute its content to a wider audience, which would align with the company's larger efforts to attract new users and thus improve Twitter's ability to serve them ads.
Apple's Spotlight search pulls much of its data from Apple-owned products and services, but also from outside sources like Wikipedia and Microsoft's Bing.
Tweets are already appearing in more places outside of Twitter, like in Google's search results. Earlier this year, Twitter struck a new deal with Google to give the search giant access to Twitter's firehose of content, making relevant tweets appear in people's Google search results.
Tweets will start appearing in Google search results next month, Twitter's Costolo said during the call.
Twitter reported on Tuesday it had 302 million users who log in monthly as of the end of last quarter. That's up 18 percent from a year earlier, but still less than a quarter of the size of Facebook.
Twitter's monthly user count is only one piece of how it views its potential user base. The company is also going after people who may not be logged in to Twitter or even have accounts, but who may see Twitter content like tweets elsewhere on the Web or in mobile apps. That's where deals like the one with Google, or conceivably one with Apple, would come into play.
Twitter syndication efforts also include publishing tweets from advertisers in Flipboard, a mobile news app.
Twitter faces challenges in growing its ads business among people who do not hold Twitter accounts. Currently, much of Twitter's ability to deliver targeted ads comes from the data it holds on how people use its site, and it tries to divine what they're interested in through their activities on Twitter.
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