Do you know what an API is? Me neither, but it has something to do with the inner workings of web applications like Twitter, LibraryThing, GoodReads, Facebook etc. When web application developers let their API’s into the wild strange things can happen.

For instance. I’m on Twitter. I’m also on GoodReads. I clicked a button on GoodReads that allowed my activity there to be let loose on Twitter. So when I add a book to my “shelf” on GoodReads it goes out as a twitter. That’s fine. Except that when I just change my status of what page I’m on in a particular book on GoodReads it also sends that to Twitter. So yesterday, for much of the day my twitter status said:
So, that was a little embarrassing. I checked GoodReads and there is no obvious way to turn this off. I don’t know whose API is at fault here, so I’m avoiding GoodReads until I figure this out.
This got me to thinking.
What if other things were to tap into Twitter. Like my house for instance. What if everything I did were to be broadcast to Twitter. It might look like this. (And yes, the House made a few typos).
This is very funny and very scary.
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Isn’t it scary? We’ve become our own big brother.
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I put my house on twitter today, it only speaks Norwegian though, and it’s kind of critical of me because it is out of firewood, but otherwise it seems to be enjoying itself online.
It has also started to follow the mars rover, and posted a link to a video it filmed out the kitchen window.
Talk about smart house!
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Morten — This is so cool! There was an article on Mashable about unusual things that tweet. You should submit your house to the comments list.
I wish I could read Norwegian!
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