Tech

UW vs. WSU: Something for players to tweet about. Or not

What you tweet can be used against you. And it's why some athletic departments have started to monitor what their student-athlete say through social media.

UW vs. WSU: Something for players to tweet about. Or not
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Ashli Blow

What you tweet can be used against you. And it's why some athletic departments have started to monitor what their student-athlete say through social media.

When University of Washington guard Isaiah Thomas arrived in Pullman  earlier this year, it wasn’t his words that caught the attention of  students at Washington State University.

It was his postings on Twitter.

“Guess What?,” wrote Thomas, who has more than 13,000 Twitter followers. “It’s freaking snowing in this GHOST town man… Damn!”

It was a harmless comment, but by game time on Jan. 30, students at  Washington State University has read the Tweet, and were ready to heckle  the Husky point throughout the game. After the Cougars’ 87-80 win,  several logged onto Twitter and sent messages back to Thomas.

While colleges have long monitored their athletes’ comments, the rise of  social media — and Twitter and Facebook in particular — have raised new  concerns for major college sports programs.  Several universities have  hired a private company to monitor the social media websites of their  athletes.

“We protect them from potentially harmful statements they make that  could affect them for life after college,” said Kevin Long, CEO of  UDiligence, which has worked with Nebraska, Texas A&M, and  Louisville, among others. UDiligence describes itself as the "only automated service that helps collegiate athletic departments  protect against damaging posts made on student-athletes' Facebook,  Twitter, and MySpace pages."

The Pac-10 conference does not have a policy for social media, but it  allows individual universities to enact their own policies. At the  University of Washington, head coaches set their own policies for social  media, according to a UW source.

Bill Stevens, the media relations director for WSU said, “The athletic  department does not have a policy regarding student athletes using  Twitter and Facebook.”

On its website, UDiligence has posted several examples of questionable  postings by athletes, including sexually suggestive images, sexist  comments, and pictures of a Pac-10 basketball player holding what  appears to be an assault rifle.

“It is impossible to tell these kids not to use Facebook or Twitter  these days when all their friends are on it and using it,” Long said.  “But at the same time, not monitoring what they are saying isn’t right  either.”

UDiligence monitors student-athletes’ posts and Tweets and notifies the  university as well as the athlete when it finds objectionable content.
 
“We have athletes install an app on their Twitter accounts and Facebook  page and when something harmful is said the system automatically  notifies the athlete and either a head coach or media director,” Long  said.
 
According to Long, Udiligence works as a computer system that uses a  pre-set word list, and whenever one of those words is used in a post or  tweet, the athlete and university are notified.

Texas A&M was one of the first clients of Udiligence.
 
“We love it,” said Shalena Brown, scholastic supervisor at Texas  A&M. “We have had it for two years now and our athletes were a  little hesitant at first, but when they warmed up to the idea of  UDiligence looking out for them they began to love it as well.”
 
Before the Jan. 30 UW-WSU game, Thomas and WSU guard Reggie Moore, who  has posted more than 8,000 comments on Twitter, started a playful  conversation on Twitter.
 
Thomas tweeted Moore, saying they should “start some beef on twitter LOL... so they can think we hate each other! Hahahaha.”
 
On Feb. 6, Thomas sent a Tweet, apparently signing off for the next  several days. The Huskies were facing the Cougars on Thursday night (March 10) in the Pac-10  tournament, whose championship game will be held on (Saturday) March 12.
 
“im off Twitter till Mar 12,” Thomas wrote, “bcuz WE WILL be playing that day!”
 
The Murrow News Service providesuniversities local, regional and statewide  stories reported and written by journalism students at The Edward R.  Murrow College of Communication at Washington State University.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal