Do you know anyone who’s “Ghost Twittering?” What do you think about that stuff?
There are a number of people who are doing it, and apparently the more “busy” (and famous) you are the more reason you have to do it (an those people can definitely afford to pay someone to “tweet” for them).
I’ll just put it out there that I think it’s pretty absurd.
I think that if I found anyone in the ministry space that’s doing it I’d feel obligated to call them out and tell them that they’ve missed the point entirely.
In fact, “faking” it in the online space for us shouldn’t even be an option.
Ghost Twittering is lame. Don’t be lame. Be cool.
dewde says
If you hack my computer and steal my private photographs one more time, our friendship is over.
peace|dewde
human3rror says
i will ghosttwitter u to death.
Chuck Self says
I guess I need to fire my ghosttwitter and repent…
Please don’t tell me that the DM I got from Andy Stanley last week was someone on your staff (my heart will break).
Chuck
PS. I bet your making a good backup of this site as I type.
human3rror says
backups.. what's that?
Mark Alves says
Musician John Michael Talbot is transparent about his shared Twitter account. He adds his initials to his own messages when clarity is needed; his assistants add "(pr tweeps)" to the end of their tweets. Of course I thought it said "pr twerps" the first time, but it's explained up front in his bio.
human3rror says
Ah, great example…! thanks for that.
JakeSchwein says
Okay I am human3rror…I will be honest from now on.
Mikes says
So true… tsk tsk tsk. I didn't know that even exists.
andydarnell says
Tangent… But I saw on Ebay that you can "buy-it-now" for $40 where someone will set up your account for you. Wow. Seriously?
human3rror says
wah? are you serious? anyone purchase?