Twitter had been footing the bill for the costs up until now, according to a post on its blog. The problem is that while sending an SMS update to the service is easy and cheap enough, Twitter has to turn around and send out SMS updates to all of your followers who have chosen to use the SMS notification feature. That could be hundreds if not thousands of people. And it will only get worse as Twitter continues to grow.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":96510,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"mobile,social,","session":"A"}']The reason it’s keeping the service alive in the U.S., Canada and India is simply because Twitter has established reciprocal relationships with mobile operators in these countries. It’s been known for some time that Twitter actually makes a little bit of money off of text message updates, and it’s likely all from these three countries.
Twitter co-found Biz Stone writes in his post:
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“It pains us to take this measure. However, we need to avoid placing undue burden on our company and our service. Even with a limit of 250 messages received per week, it could cost Twitter about $1,000 per user, per year to send SMS outside of Canada, India, or the US. It makes more sense for us to establish fair billing arrangements with mobile operators than it does to pass these high fees on to our users.”
The service says it will continue to try and establish relationships with mobile operators in other countries to bring back the SMS outbound updates there. Until then it gives a list of web and native applications that work with Twitter and bypass SMS.
The fact that you can now use mobile instant messaging services on many phones and doing so on plans with unlimited data will be significantly cheaper for a more complex service should show just how ridiculous SMS rates are.
It’s not going to die anytime soon, but I believe mobile operators will start to include unlimited text messaging in their “unlimited” plans. Consumers will soon wake up and demand it. Sprint already does this with its Everything plan.
If that shift doesn’t happen, eventually something on the mobile web, whether it’s instant messaging or some other form of communication, will wipe out the text message.
This news today also shows why it’s imperative for Twitter to create a solid mobile application. Sure, some of the third party ones are nice, but the future of Twitter is mobile; it needs to fully embrace it.
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You can find me on Twitter here along with fellow VentureBeat writers Eric Eldon, Dean Takahashi, Anthony Ha, Chris Morrison and Dan Kaplan. Oh, and we have a VentureBeat account (for our posts) as well.
[photo: flickr/NickStarr –See that 2761 number near the SMS icon? Yep, those are Twitter texts.]
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