Skip to main content

Twitter launches Gnip Engagement and Audience APIs to give insight into impressions

What you can get through the new Twitter Gnip Engagement API.
Image Credit: Screenshot

Twitter today announced two new application programming interfaces that developers can use to integrate data from the Twitter’s Gnip service into third-party apps.

They’re not just meant to provide tweets, which Gnip already does. Rather, these new ones — the Audience API and the Engagement API — will provide information about reach for and impressions on tweets. Until now Gnip has only had the Realtime and Historical APIs.

Both of the new APIs are in beta, Chris Moody, Twitter’s vice president of data strategy, said today at its Flight developer conference in San Francisco.

“The Engagement API is going to let you as developers help your customers understand what’s happening with their organic content, so you can help them understand things like impressions, which have never been programmatically available — no more guessing about impressions,” Moody said.


June 5th: The AI Audit in NYC

Join us next week in NYC to engage with top executive leaders, delving into strategies for auditing AI models to ensure fairness, optimal performance, and ethical compliance across diverse organizations. Secure your attendance for this exclusive invite-only event.


The Audience API provides granular information about brands’ audiences.

The kinds of data you can get out of the new Twitter Gnip Audience API.

Above: The kinds of data you can get out of the new Twitter Gnip Audience API.

Image Credit: Screenshot

“We’re surfacing … demographic and psychographic analysis that we’ve never surfaced before,” Moody said.

https://twitter.com/Flight/status/656901998583746561

Twitter bought Gnip last year.

Startups participating in the Techstars accelerator will have free access to Gnip’s data sources, said Moody, who noted that Gnip has gotten feedback that its services are expensive. But beyond that, this is an olive branch to third-party developers, reflecting newly reinstated Twitter chief executive Jack Dorsey’s desire to “reset” relations with developers.

Find all the news coming out of the conference here.