Forum:Using official twitter pages as a source?

i was reading the manual of style recently and was wondering if tweets from official accounts such as https://twitter.com/#!/bbcdoctorwho and https://twitter.com/#!/steven_moffat count as valid sources for articles on this wiki. it didn't mention anything in the manual of style about that sort of thing and if it is allowed, can i suggest it be added in. Imamadmad talk to me 06:17, December 19, 2011 (UTC)


 * I think that Doctor Who Official twitter and ClassicDW twitter should be considered valid sources as they're stated as the official twitter pages.
 * I'm less sure of using Steven Moffat's twitter as a source. The two Doctor Who twitter accounts are both stated as the "Official" pages meaning they're sanctioned by the BBC and therefore the information has been approved for release in the same way a press release or whatever would be. But Moffat's page, while being a verified page doesn't state anything about him being an official mouth piece for the BBC.
 * So I'm unsure about using his, or any other writer, actor or crew's twitter as a source. But I'd like to see other user's thoughts before we consider writing a ruling into the MOS. --Tangerineduel / talk 15:21, December 21, 2011 (UTC)


 * against Steven Moffat's twitter because of what you said and also that Steven Moffat (probably as well as any future showrunner with twitter) lies A LOT if you haven't noticed by now. Almost everything he say are lies, he is the least reliable source anyone could possibly think of. --222.166.181.146talk to me 22:33, December 27, 2011 (UTC)


 * I reckon use a twitter page as a source for something that it could hold credible information for. Eg. Steven Moffat's twitter could be used as a source for, say, personal details of Moffat's childhood, but not something such as the next 2Entertain DVD release. Get the idea?  Tardis1963   talk  08:53, December 28, 2011 (UTC)

Reviving
This never got a definitive answer. Kicking back up the list for more comments before I archive and codify it. 19:33: Wed 02 May 2012
 * I'd go with Tardis1963's suggestion.
 * For Doctor Who-related info it has to come from "Official" Twitter accounts, and only these.
 * For personal information about real world people it can come from verified Twitter accounts.
 * Is having two rules for different information too complicated though? --Tangerineduel / talk 15:41, May 3, 2012 (UTC)
 * Tricky, this, cause Moffat lies. With his twitter account. Like everyone.  And there are only 140 characters.  So misinterpretations are more the norm than the exception.  Twitter is kinda like reading tea leaves in a cup that's actually made for espresso, isn't it?  03:42: Fri 04 May 2012


 * Well, that's why I said we keep the personal Twitter pages for personal information like; when they were born or what their favourite story is or stuff like that.
 * We use the "official" Twitter like the classicDoctor Who, Official Doctor Who and the DWM pages as sources that we'd cite. These feeds are usually used as releasing bit sized information unlike Moffat's or whatever they're truthful and usually doing it as a promotion/PR/new-type sort of thing.
 * Ideally I'd like to just include the latter of classicDW/DWM/Official Doctor Who pages and ignore the real world/Verified twitter accounts, but that seems kinda double standards and we might have people citing the Moff's account. --Tangerineduel / talk 15:12, May 4, 2012 (UTC)


 * I do follow Moffat on Twitter, and the only time he tells the truth is when something has already been announced. I.e a story title. It the BBC announces something, he might back it up. However, most of the time its just teases. People asking him for the truth, they ain't going to get it. MM/ Want to talk? 15:28, May 4, 2012 (UTC)