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by antr 4275 days ago
Note on SumAll

All users who use SumAll should be wary of their service. We tried them out and we then found out that they used our social media accounts to spam our followers and users with their advertising. We contacted them asking for answers and we never heard from them. Our suggestion: Avoid SumAll.

1 comments

Hey Antr, Jacob from SumAll here. Sorry to hear you had a bad experience with us. The tweets you're talking about that "spam" your accounts were most likely the performance tweets that you are free to toggle on and off. Here's how you can do that: https://support.sumall.com/customer/portal/articles/1378662-...

Best, Jacob

As the tweets contain both SumAll-related hash tags and Links to SumAll, this is definitely marketing that should be opt-in, not opt-out. Unless the user of your service is explicitly made aware of these automated tweets in clear terms when they sign up, this is a bit shady and dishonest to say the least.
Even if it's in the terms - do it opt-in.
So SumAll spams your followers by default but you can turn it off if you know how?
There's no need for scare quotes. You were clearly spamming the guy's followers.

You are also free to toggle that feature off, and should.

>the performance tweets that you are free to toggle on and off.

It's opt out isn't it.

I couldn't imagine a worse target audience to use that line on.

This is opt-out? Srsly?
maybe it is a revenue stream for them?
And...? I'm sure it is. It markets their product at the expense of their user's credibility with their social circles. There's no downside! (For Sumall)
There is ... the ability for them to get word of mouth marketing is effectively dead for them. At best, if someone really likes it ..they no longer need to tell their friends... it's already done it for them.
Of course it is, but such posting on behalf should imho always be opt-in.