We welcome and encourage the use of Twitter in broadcast. Our requirements ensure that Twitter users receive attribution for their content, and help provide the best experience for your audience. Here you'll also find suggestions based on what's worked best in previous broadcast integrations, as well as contact info to reach us with any questions.
For information regarding using our brand and trademarks in other settings, as well as content on Twitter, please see our brand and logo resource www.twitter.com/logo.
Broadcast includes but is not limited to: the exhibition, distribution, transmission, reproduction, public performance or public display of Tweets by any and all means of media delivery (all forms of television, radio, satellite, Internet protocols, video, closed-circuit wireless, and electronic sell-through, etc.) whether existing now or developed hereafter. If you’re not sure if your use is covered by these guidelines, get in touch (contact info below).
We want to ensure the best experience for those viewing your broadcast and simplify the permissions and licensing process for you. If you follow these guidelines, you do not need to contact Twitter for any additional display or trademark clearances. In some cases, permission from the content creator may still be necessary, as Twitter users retain rights to the content they post.
In all cases, without explicit permission of the original content creator, Twitter content may not be used
Further:
Requirements:
Don’t:
Showing unattributed data in aggregate or visualized form is permitted, but must still include the official Twitter bird.
Requirements:
Don’t:
When showing @usernames alone, outside of the context of a Tweet, always include the @ sign and add the Twitter bird to the left.
Always include the # sign in Twitter hashtags, and add the Twitter bird to the left.
When reading Tweets on air with no graphic display of the Tweet, you do not need to display the Twitter bird but you do need to verbally attribute it to Twitter.
Read the Tweet as originally written, without edits.
Make sure to include a reference to Twitter when mentioning Twitter usernames. For example, “Follow us on Twitter, at-username” or “You can follow Lady Gaga on Twitter, at-ladygaga”
Make sure to include a reference to Twitter when mentioning Twitter hashtags. For example, “Use the hashtag ‘election2012’ on Twitter” or “The hashtag for this broadcast on Twitter is bbcaq”.
Readability improves if the name and @username is displayed with some form of style differentiation from Tweet text (bold, color, size, or other convention) followed on a new line by the full text of the Tweet.
Include user avatars when possible, either to the left of the Tweet or creatively as per your design.
Enhance readability by using distinct animation when showing Tweets, such as fading text.
For questions on these policies, or any question on appropriate use of Tweets or the Twitter marks, please contact us at trademarks [at] twitter.com.
Tweets in the lower third. Ideally, you should animate full, complete Tweets onto the screen and allow them to rest there. We prefer that you don't use continuously scrolling text or a crawl that shows only part of a Tweet at a time.
Full-screen Tweets. Use a different color for the user’s name and @username. We recommend that you animate Tweets onto the screen one at a time. Focus on legibility; don't crowd the screen with Tweets.
Tweets as part of a physical set. Often, showing Tweets on a physical monitor, web wall, or as part of a set design element is your most flexible display option. Make sure the Twitter logo is integrated into that element specifically — not overlaid on the screen in a general way.