Twitter sees strong growth in Russia
March 9th, 2010 — Bruce EtlingAs I wrote last week, Twitter is starting to expand beyond its English-language roots in the US. Yesterday the Russian search engine Yandex released a short fact sheet on Russian language Twitter users. Here are the highlights (via Nick Wilson):
* Yandex estimates 183 thousand Russian accounts on Twitter
* More than 60% of Russian-speaking users update their Twitter stream every day
* 67% of all Tweets contain links, 8% of Tweets contain links to the media.
* During the winter 2009-2010 the number of Russian-speaking users on Twitter has
increased by 42%. In the year period from March 2009 to March 2010, by 26%.
* About 150 thousand Tweets (messages) are posted each day in Russian. 5% of them are ReTweets.
* There are more than 125 thousands links published on Twitter each day.
* Yandex studies more than 20 microblogging services in RuNet. Every day, more than 2 millions entries are made.
Perhaps most interesting is how strong the growth is during the winter compared to spring – gotta do something during those long Russian winters I guess. Yandex has also created a list of the most popular Russian Twitter users. Not much on the substance of the discussions taking place, but we are starting to dig into that now.
March 10th, 2010 at 12:55 pm
[…] est en train de s’étendre hors de sa base anglophone», peut-on lire sur le blog Internet & Democracy, du Berkman Center d’Harvard. Bruce Etling, le directeur du programme, cite un court rapport […]
March 11th, 2010 at 2:09 am
[…] Internet & Democracy Blog » Twitter sees strong growth in Russia 11 mars 2010 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/idblog/2010/03/09/twitter-sees-strong-growth-in-… […]
March 12th, 2010 at 1:26 pm
хорошая новости
March 15th, 2010 at 9:30 pm
Its not only Russia, I mean all the world is floating towards twitter and maximum are those who are using twitter on their mobiles.
March 16th, 2010 at 7:38 am
Honestly, I do not understand the value of twitter. I read one market research statement that says nearly half of all tweets was “unnecessary babble.” Only 9% had “pass-along value.” Maybe only 4% was “news.” Okay, I’m a senior citizen, but I get Instant Messaging. I get MySpace, FaceBook and Friendster. Heck, I even get an occasional rap song, in case the beat and melody are just right. But this SMS for the net seems a tiny bit too thinly clever — a bit excessive fad and flash in the pan, for my tastes. Possibly there’s a Zen side for this. Any one care to Enlighten me?