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Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire

Does 'Twitter Limited' mean Twitter is coming to Dublin?

‘Twitter Limited’ was registered on January 24th – does that mean one of the tech world’s hottest sites is setting up shop here?

RUMOURS that Twitter is to set up a European base in Ireland have been ongoing for quite some time – ever since December, when the Guardian reported that a European HQ was to be set up this year, rumours have flown about the microblogging site following Google and Facebook in setting up its continental headquarters in Ireland.

This morning our colleague Ciarán Maher noted that a company, ‘Twitter Limited’, was founded in Ireland – a potential sign that the site was readying itself for a corporate expansion into Ireland – and filed with the Companies Registration Office just last month.

We’ve had a look into the records, however, and the signs aren’t quite so promising.

First of all, it’s worth doing a quick Google search for the address at which the company has been filed: 74 Lower Camden Street, Dublin 2. The first result returned is a place page for an ‘Online Company & Tax Registration in Ireland’ service, mycompany.ie – essentially, an enterprise that assists people in setting up off-the-shelf companies.

Digging a little deeper, though, the details in the company’s 9-page memorandum of association are also unlikely to add further fuel to the fires: Twitter Inc., the US-based corporation that owns Twitter, is not a shareholder in the new ‘Twitter Limited’. The sole shareholder is a David Colleran with an address in Bray, who has taken 100 shares at €1 each.

[Edit: Reader Colm King has spotted, in the comments section below, that the address is also used by Colleran & Company Chartered Accountants; mycompany.ie, on closer inspection, appears to be a business operation of the same accountancy firm.]

What’s more, of the 23 listed ‘objects for which the Company is established’, only one has any reference to the internet or online activity; the rest are standard issue statements saying the company will, in short, make whatever infrastructural investment and raise whatever funds it needs in order to pursue its goals.

(Click the photo below to enlarge.)

The single internet-focussed goal of the company is:

To carry on businesses of the provision of online marketing, communicating and entertainment.

The final nail in the idea's coffin is that Twitter Limited does not, it would appear, even own the business names of 'Twitter' or 'Twitter Ireland' - the former is registered to an address that coincides with that of WebSpider.ie, a Galway-based web development company; the latter's address, on Wicklow Street in Dublin 2, coincides with that of web design firm Ripe.ie.

In conclusion? While it's possible that the Twitter Ltd company has been established by someone with a professional relationship with Twitter Inc, and has set the company up on their authority, it strikes us as unusually odd that Twitter Inc. would not at least take some formal ownership in the company.

The more likely situation is that the company has been set up by a speculator looking to have a chance of muscling into Twitter's operations if it does, eventually, open operations within this jurisdiction.

(Twitter Limited in the UK, incidentally, was incorporated in March 2009, but is formally listed as a 'dormant company' at present, having not filed accounts in the meantime.)

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6 Comments
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    Mute in_zane_burger
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 3:06 PM

    Can I have my money back now

    32
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    Mute padser123
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 3:33 PM

    It’s like’…..burning your furniture – to keep warm!

    23
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    Mute Paul Roche
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 4:52 PM

    Why are PwC saying this instead of IBRC and NAMA?

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    Mute Philip
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 5:20 PM

    As property prices start to rise nama , ibrc start to dump property

    Can someone explain why?

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    Mute Dara O'Brien
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 5:56 PM

    Dumping loans philip, not property. They’re Dumping the loans as they’re non-performing and want to get them off the balance sheet.

    If they had the patience, they’d put arrangements in place to allow the properties to return to positive equity and then seek a sale, this recouping more of the tax payers money.

    Unfortunately, they’ll sell the loans for a discount and allow the new purchasers to do this and net a tidy profit.

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    Mute Garry Coll
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 5:02 PM

    The article outlines that IBRC (IBROKE would probably be a better name) will offload € 15 billion in loans.
    Yet the linked article tells us that IBROKE have already offloaded 90% of its loanbook, € 19.8 billion out of € 21.7 billion leaving just € 1.9 billion on hand.
    This can only mean, if the previous article is correct, that it is NAMA that is offloading the majority of the loans.
    Why the subterfuge?
    Why make people think that this is some kind of joint enterprise when it is NAMA that is leading the charge?
    Have the shiny suit brigade from the canal something to hide?
    Given their obsession with secrecy it would not surprise me if they have, perhaps selling the loans to some preferred customer with an inside track at a serious discount.
    The way things go it will all be wrapped up before we know anything, plus ça change.

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    Mute Irish Revolution
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 2:58 PM

    Who in their right mind would buy this junk?

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    Mute Padraig McHale
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 3:01 PM

    It might only be worth 30% of face value but if you buy it for 20% it’s a good deal. For the buyer anyway.

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    Mute Tony
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 3:06 PM

    @ Irish Revolution

    The Banks?

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    Mute Deirdre McDonnell
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    Apr 3rd 2014, 2:42 AM

    Hedge funds bought it. They will now sell off all the ghost estates etc at a lower price so people that have houses for sale at the min will eventually have to sell for half or take them off the market.
    Fab house here in drogheda asking price €325. Hilarious. You could now nearly get a house for that on raglan road or ailsbury road!! So that house is realistically worth less than €150 really.
    People and notions ha

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    Mute Vanessa Doyle
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    Apr 2nd 2014, 7:04 PM

    What about Bank of Scotland selling on my mortgage & others in their Irish portfolio to a company called Tanager Ltd.
    I’m in a tizzy all day because I don’t know what it means for us.

    3
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