As we noted before, no other medium captured the action as it was happening, although users on Facebook may also have conversed about the raid as it was happening. If anything, this series of tweets will probably show how Twitter had its true “CNN moment,” much like the 1990 Gulf War opening was captured by CNN.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":258434,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"business,media,social,","session":"C"}']Within a minute, 80 people had retweeted it. One of those was New York Times writer Brian Stelter, who has more than 50,000 followers on Twitter. Within two minutes, 300 reactions to the post were spreading, SocialFlow reported.
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Twitter said that it hit a peak of about 5,106 tweets per second last night at 8 pm Pacific time. That was close to a record in volume of tweets, beating out the Super Bowl 2011, which had 4,064 tweets per second. But it wasn’t as big as New Years Eve 2010 in Japan, with 6,939 tweets per second. During the Japan quake and tsunami, tweets per second hit 5,530 and passed the 5,000 mark five times on March 11.
But the event had the highest sustained rate of tweets over a period of hours. On average, the tweets per second were 3,000 between 8:45 pm and 11:20 pm yesterday. There were 38.7 million tweets in three hours and 35 minutes. (Yes, clearly Twitter’s official data is different from Sysomos’ data). By comparison, the Super Bowl hit a sustained 3,000 tweets per second for only 20 minutes. During the royal wedding on Friday, the tweets per second hit 3,966.
Of course, Urbahn wasn’t the first to tweet about the incident. That honor goes to Sohaib Athar, an information technology manager at Really Virtual. He liveblogged about the firefight at Osama bin Laden’s compound. Athar goes by the handle @ReallyVirtual on Twitter.
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