Twitter Is Going to Need a Lot More Than Just a Magic Pony

Must read

Lucille Barrett
Lucille Barretthttps://bloggingkits.org
Future teen idol. Hardcore tv lover. Social media guru. Zombie aficionado. Travel scholar. Biker, shiba-inu lover, audiophile, Mad Men fan and proud pixelpusher. Working at the junction of minimalism and elegance to answer design problems with honest solutions. I'm fueled by craft beer, hip-hop and tortilla chips.

Using machine learning to curate content is not going to solve some of Twitter’s larger problems.

Wordpress

When a technology company whose stock has been underwater buying a company called Magic Pony—as Twitter just did—the headlines pretty much write themselves. The acquisition, which has a reported price tag of $150 million, is supposed to boost Twitter’s abilities in the machine learning department to get smarter about the photos and videos that it displays to users. But even having a magic pony may not be enough to help Twitter win this particular race.

As Fortune‘s Barb Darrow explained in a post about the deal, Magic Pony is a British startup with expertise in the visual end of machine learning, a branch of artificial intelligence focusing on algorithms that can adapt their behavior based on new data. The idea is that these kinds of algorithms will help Twitter come up with the kind of content users want. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey explained in a post:

Read More Articles :

Magic Pony’s technology – based on research by the team to create algorithms that can understand the features of imagery – will be used to enhance our strength in live and video and opens up a whole lot of exciting creative possibilities for Twitter.

The Twitter post talks about adding Magic Pony to a group at the company building that it calls “Twitter Cortex,” a team of engineers, data scientists, and artificial intelligence experts who are building a product where “people can easily find new experiences to share and participate in.” In other words, a product that can boost the kind of user engagement levels that Twitter desperately needs in order to convince Wall Street that it is worth its $10-billion market cap.

Since he returned to Twitter TWTR -3.16% as CEO a year ago, Dorsey has talked repeatedly about how he wants Twitter to become the first place people go for real-time content of all kinds. “Twitter is live,” he said during the company’s earnings call earlier this year. “Live commentary, live conversations, and live connections.” A big part of that has been a push towards video, with the company’s much-touted deal to stream NFL games being just one example of that strategy.

One problem for Twitter in betting on video is thatFacebook has also set its sights on being the place where people go for live video and real-time content, and it has made significant gains even in just the past year, accumulating more than nine billion video views a day. Dorsey can complain that Twitter has been all about real-time for almost a decade now, but that doesn’t matter to users who want to see the latest Chewbacca Mom video clip or exploding watermelon.

As a number of outlets have reported, Facebook is also paying news organizations and publishers—including theNew York Times—to produce live video for its platform, and they are doing so in great numbers. Is Twitter going to start paying producers as well?

Figuring out how to show users more relevant content, meanwhile, is something that Twitter has been trying to do for some time now, with features such as Moments and a timeline that is now ranked at least partly by algorithms (as Facebook’s is). It’s possible that Magic Pony’s technology will help with that, but showing users good content is only one of the problems facing the company..

More articles

Latest article