Twitter as a Transport Layer Platform
Dmitry Namiot

TL;DR
This paper explores using Twitter as a transport layer for information systems, introducing a programmable service that enables user-defined commands via tweets, expanding Twitter's role beyond social interaction.
Contribution
It introduces a novel programmable service called 411 that leverages Twitter as a transport layer for custom application commands.
Findings
Twitter can be effectively used as a messaging transport layer.
The 411 service enables user-defined commands through tweets.
This approach broadens Twitter's application beyond social networking.
Abstract
Internet messengers and social networks have become an integral part of modern digital life. We have in mind not only the interaction between individual users but also a variety of applications that exist in these applications. Typically, applications for social networks use the universal login system and rely on data from social networks. Also, such applications are likely to get more traction when they are inside of the big social network like Facebook. At the same time, less attention is paid to communication capabilities of social networks. In this paper, we target Twitter as a messaging system at the first hand. We describe the way information systems can use Twitter as a transport layer for own services. Our work introduces a programmable service called 411 for Twitter, which supports user-defined and application-specific commands through tweets.
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Peer-to-Peer Network Technologies · Caching and Content Delivery
