A president,Germany an actress from Scandal, an American Idolcontestant, and a star quarterback were just four of the many influential figures found to have purchased fake Twitter followers, via a New York Timesinvestigation published Saturday.
But while these acts are shady and can influence the results of something — from getting a customer service complaint in front of Volvo to a presidential campaign — they are often overlooked by the platforms themselves.
SEE ALSO: Why Twitter's future just got even darkerTwitter says it does invest in fighting bots, as in false or spam accounts. But it doesn't always suspend users that are purchasing fake engagement to spread their messages or just tout their reach. That policy comes even as the Timesfound evidence of influential figures using a service called Devumi to purchase followers and shared that information with Twitter.
Twitter's resistance to immediately suspending or punishing these acts is, in part, a result of the company's inability to detect who is responsible, a Twitter spokesperson explained to the Times.
DJ Snake's followers were apparently purchased by his former manager. Martha Lane Fox, a Twitter board member, said a rogue employee used Devumi at least seven times to buy followers for her account.
"We take the action of suspending an account from the platform very seriously," the spokesperson said. "At the same time, we want to aggressively fight spam on the platform."
The Timesitself set up a new Twitter account and spent $225 on 25,000 followers. The team found that the first 10,000 followers appeared like real people. That's in part because Devumi will scrape the dormant accounts of real people to create fake profiles.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Unfortunately for those victims of impersonation, Twitter does not proactively review accounts to see if they're impersonating other users, like what has been done to a real person named Jessica Rychly, who was featured in the Timesstory. Instead, Twitter looks for accounts that are violating the company's anti-spam policies, a Twitter spokesperson told the Times. All of the sample accounts the Times provided to Twitter were shut down, however.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
As the Times notes, Twitter could enact some safeguards such as running an anti-spam test for new accounts. A recent report from the University of South California and Indiana University claimed that as many as 48 million of Twitter's active users are automated accounts impersonating real people. The company told theTimesthat number is "far lower."
For now, it seems that Twitter is focused on abuse and hate speech rather than stressing about celebrities paying for fame.
While Twitter could have included a more aggressive response to the Timesstory, something about taking action against these actions, and yeah, there's the fact that these services have been around for years, the company did issue a blanket pledge shorty after the investigation published:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Read more about the black market of social media engagement here.
Topics Social Media X/Twitter Celebrities
Twitter is mocking this political graph for a very good reasonTwitter starts rolling out audio tweetsApple is closing stores it just reMIT unveils wearable guides for the visually impairedTwitter's audio tweets reveal a bigger accessibility problemAMC will make moviegoers wear masks in theaters after outcryCat nomming on a fancy French pastry is as adorable as you thinkPoliticians change 404 error page to troll UK Prime Minister Theresa MayArizona fires seen fuming from spaceEmptier, safer roads? Data tells a different story.Emptier, safer roads? Data tells a different story.Facebook removes Trump campaign ads that contain Nazi symbolsSome genius is adding googly eyes to rusty street objects in BulgariaPeople want Britain's prime minister to stand up to Trump, not hold his handAll the best signs from the March for Truth, the protest against Trump's ties to RussiaAnarchist pigeon DGAF about human signageFacebook drops, YouTube rises as a source of U.S. newsFacebook faces boycott push from NAACP, ADL, and other civil rights groupsJuneteenth Google Doodle: 'Let us march on til victory is won'Cat nomming on a fancy French pastry is as adorable as you think Now's a great time to buy Riverrun Castle from 'Game of Thrones' Why the GOP won't even mention the LGBT community in its response to Orlando Amazon finally makes collaborative wish lists a reality Violent California Carr Fire leaps river, enters Redding 'Star Wars: Episode IX' cast announced China invites reporter to take sledgehammer to its longest glass bridge to prove it's safe Kim Kardashian holds onto things in sexy 'GQ' photoshoot On North West's third birthday, we honor her growing personal brand Classic Disney characters if they were bitten by zombies and joined the undead horde Somehow, Alex Jones is still on Spotify and iTunes. MoviePass ran out of money and the service crashed So long, Star Wars episodes: the Skywalker saga is officially over Drake 'In My Feelings' challenge ends with a man getting hit by a car Justin Bieber calls on his Belieber army to silence the press 'Inuyashiki Last Hero' review: The most Cows, spiders and dogs kill more people in the U.S. than alligators McDonald's is launching its own currency because of course Taylor Swift donated concert tickets to a mourning police department Ofo has thousands of bicycles to donate after major U.S. downsizing The Tommy Jeans Xplore smart clothing line is all about rewards
3.0554s , 10132.46875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Germany】,New Knowledge Information Network