Sweden let its citizens loose on the country's Twitter, but now it's time to say 'hej då'
356 random Swedes tweeted for one week at a time, saying whatever they wanted. It went surprisingly well
For seven years, regular Swedes were given the keys to the country's Twitter account for one week at a time. @Sweden curators — all 356 of them — could say whatever they wanted as long as they didn't break Swedish law.
When Mattias Axelsson's turn came up last month, he wanted the world to know about the country's lesser-known traditions.
"Like that we have Pizza Day on New Year's Day, and that we have Cinnamon Bun Day on October 4th," the school teacher and blogger told Day 6.
After the account's 150,000 followers each had a week of musings on Swedish culture, Axelsson was the final citizen to curate @Sweden.
Organized by the Swedish Institute to "boost interest in Sweden," the account posted a farewell video on October 1. It remains as an archive of nearly 200,000 thoughts from everyday citizens.
"It's quite sad that the account is gone," Axelsson said. "It shows the world the richness of Swedish culture and the richness of Swedish people."
From the <a href="https://twitter.com/sweden?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@sweden</a> team: After 7 years and 356 twitterers, it's time to say goodbye. Thank you, curators – for having shared Sweden with the world! Bye-bye followers – it’s been fun and wild, but mostly fun! ❤️ 👋 <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/thankyoucurators?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#thankyoucurators</a> <a href="https://t.co/JHukwtdbZq">pic.twitter.com/JHukwtdbZq</a>
—@sweden
Unprecedented control
Before being run by Swedes, @Sweden was a typical tourism account featuring photos of moose and the Stockholm skyline at dusk.
The Curators of Sweden project was groundbreaking when it first launched. The idea of handing over a branded tourism account to citizens was described as "either genius or insane" back in 2011.
Announcing the end of the project, the Swedish Institute said "every project has an end," and acknowledged that since it first began in 2011, the internet has changed.
The growth and polarization of social media has some wondering whether that was the project's true downfall.
"When it started seven years ago, Twitter was much, much smaller," Axelsson said. "And I also think that the tone of Twitter was more friendly … seven years ago."
PR from 'beginning to the end'
Despite being a well-loved — and usually positive — corner of Twitter, the project has had its share of criticism.
"You have to remember that this account was a PR thing. It was PR from the beginning to the end," said Jack Werner, @Sweden's first curator.
When Werner first took the reigns back in December 2011, he tweeted with a rather crude sense of humour.
"I was myself and I lost hundreds of followers the first couple of days as a result," Werner said.
I've had a blast the last week, an I hope you haven't become totally tired of my old man fart jokes. You guys are the best!
—@sweden
And like any scheme involving hundreds of Twitter users, things can go awry.
The account came under fire last year when a user blocked 14,000 Twitter users she deemed to be involved in "threats against migrants, women and LGBTQ people," according to Sweden's the Local.
Curator Vian Tahir, an online security expert, used a so-called block list that also included the names of innocent users. The Swedish Institute unblocked all 14,000 users the following day.
"That conversation entered into a larger conversation about how Twitter [is] constantly undervaluing conservative voices," Werner said.
Criticized for pizza toppings
But, like a trip to IKEA, all good things must come to an end. Though some followers have already expressed their disappointment, Werner believes @Sweden has run its course.
"I think it has done good things, but it's not a bad idea to close it," Werner said.
Fortunately, the account closed on a positive note. Axelsson says he faced little criticism during his week as a curator.
Pizza with bananas, curry and peanuts. Is there any problem with that? <a href="https://t.co/LA8ZY9XQyE">pic.twitter.com/LA8ZY9XQyE</a>
—@sweden
Users asked him questions and took interest in his tweets about Swedish culture, he says.
"The most criticism I got was when I posted a picture of a Swedish pizza with curry, pineapple and peanuts, and actually, some Italian guy was really annoyed with this picture," said Axelsson.
"This is not a pizza, they said."