Indigenous Tweets provides the profile picture of each Twitter user and statistics about each person's number of followers.
[5] The cataloged languages include the "esoteric" Gamilaraay and the "better-known" Haitian Creole and Basque,[6] which have the first and second most Tweeters, respectively.
[7] Kapampangan, which was ranked seventh in the last week of April 2011, was the first Philippine language supported by the website.
A site like Indigenous Tweets is a good example of a website that allows people to connect and communicate and use their language in a natural way online.
In an April 2011 interview with BBC News, Scannell said that he has spent 8 years building a data bank of around 500 languages by reviewing blogs, newspapers, and websites.