Yes, I think I follow that. (Cannon argues that Weiner had created a yFrog account, since he was able to immediately go to yFrog and delete the picture that had been posted in it. Is this in dispute?)
Well, what is in dispute is the necessity to 'create' a yfrog account.
Prior to May 27th, all of the pictures Weiner had posted to his account were sent via Blackberry. (Or so I've seen posted; is that incorrect?) That's one reason Cannon mistakenly thought that would have been true on the 27th as well. If Weiner had previously been posting pictures via Blackberry rather than TweetDeck, wouldn't that have created the yFrog account already?
This is my understanding of how yfrog work(ed):
You could post to pictures to yfrog linked to your twitter account by
1) creating an account which is your twitter name + yfrog 'secret' word and using email. You would just email the picture to
your.twitter.secret@yfrog
If someone knew your twitter name and secret word, they could send a picture to that email address and it would appear in your twitter stream with no tweet attached, just the yfrog link.
This was demonstrated here and other places.
2) Using twtter for blackberry, tweedtdeck, or other twitter clients, you can also post pictures to yfrog ( or twitpics, or bit.ly or other image hosts )
The use of these other clients
does not require the creation of a yfrog account to post images to yfrog. These apps use
Oauth and twitters API to authenticate the user to TWITTER.
IOW - twitter for blackberry does not create a yfrog account for the user in the format listed in (1) - but authenticates the user with their own twitter password and Oauth to post an image to the users twitter stream. IE the yfrog app gets permission from twitter using the twitter API to post yfrog url with the picture to the users twitter stream.
This is the reason I brought weiners interview with cnn earlier, when he said:
"And I see this thing pop up. I immediately delete it. OK? I immediately delete the photo - I thought I deleted – I mean, I'm not a hundred percent sure – I deleted the photo and then this – this - without any password or anything, I was able to get into the account where this photograph was hosted somehow."
He did not authenticate with a user name/password to yfrog, by his own admission. That's because integration/authentication is 'baked in' to many twitter clients. Including twitter for blackberry and tweetdeck.
See
this image to demonstrate what I am talking about.
One more question: can you cite me a source (other than Gooding's blog post) which states that if you upload a picture to yFrog via TweetDeck it does not automatically generate a tweet the way it does if you do not use TweetDeck?
I understand Gooding seems to be claiming that -- but Gooding's writing on this is not clear. What Gooding appears to actually demonstrate is that he was able to upload a picture to yFrog with TweetDeck without generating such a tweet. That's not the same as establishing it's impossible to generate such a tweet when you use TweetDeck; what it establishes is that it's possible not to generate such a tweet when you use TweetDeck.
That Gooding was able to find a method to upload a picture via TweetDeck without generating a tweet certainly is relevant to the discussion. But I'd like to be clear that this means pictures uploaded by TweetDeck never generate this kind of tweet. Who says that, and how do they know?
If I understand your point (and I am not sure I do, entirely) - You are questioning the difference in whether there is just a URL linking to the yfrog picture, and whether there is a tweet attached ?
As I understand it, posting a picture via the
your.twitter.secret@yfrog email would only create the link, not a tweet attached to it. But this would be the same if you posted only a picture with no tweet attached via twitter for blackberry or tweetdeck - so I am not sure of the relevance.
The key piece of information so far is the logs detailed
here that show that image was posted via tweetdeck.
"TweetCongress’s software captures all the information Twitter API makes available — including the source application for tweets."
Simply put, if the image was posted via yfrog, whether Weiner had ever had a yfrog account or not, the information would have shown that tweet was posted via yfrog. It wasn't.
Clear now ?
