This is even more significant in that unlike other URL shortners such as bit.ly, t.co won't show you statistics (at least for free).
So if you get a bunch of t.co traffic and you don't want to pay Twitter for statistics, the only way that I've seen that you can understand how you are getting traffic is to search for keywords relevant to your site and hope to find a tweet that includes the t.co link that you saw in your logs. You usually can't even search for the t.co link itself (unless it appears in the text of the tweet.)
Very annoying for people who want to study their server logs without paying extra money, but a great way for Twitter to monetize. (Even if users decide to include a bit.ly link to get free statistics within a tweet, it will still be hard to track down as explained above.)
Thanks. My failed search was for a substring (i.e. t.co/ISHbpUw) since that's what I see in Google Analytics but that failed; searching for the full URL resolved that problem.
My previous post was also poorly worded. I have no knowledge over whether t.co statistics will be free or not; only that I don't think there is a free way to get them now; I haven't investigated if there were available paid options. The situation of tracking which tweets are giving you traffic is still poor right now, but it might improve in the future.
So if you get a bunch of t.co traffic and you don't want to pay Twitter for statistics, the only way that I've seen that you can understand how you are getting traffic is to search for keywords relevant to your site and hope to find a tweet that includes the t.co link that you saw in your logs. You usually can't even search for the t.co link itself (unless it appears in the text of the tweet.)
Very annoying for people who want to study their server logs without paying extra money, but a great way for Twitter to monetize. (Even if users decide to include a bit.ly link to get free statistics within a tweet, it will still be hard to track down as explained above.)