- Joined
- Dec 17, 2021
I think this is probably true, since 4chan has just turned into spam for the most part, which is probably why they changed over to their new captcha system.
One thing I always found interesting, was a talk I heard about how people would use spam efficiently to hurt websites, with one one version being cloning real chat rooms or threads and then deploying them as a bot at a later date. That way messages would seem genuine, because they were at one time, but anyone trying to interact with them would feel very alienated as all of this "real" interaction was happening without acknowledging them. This is probably less of an issue in some cases, but imagine this being used on users of sites that are shadow banned, they can be put into a quarantine where everything they see is something that happened years ago but is being replicated using bots.
We also know many big names in social media buy subscribers as "social proof" and many new fledgling sites use fake interaction and subscriber growth on user accounts to drive early growth. I wouldn't be surprised if just like fiat currency a lot of the social media interaction was being inflated over time using various methods and actual pool of people interacting outside of a very casual glance to look something up was far smaller than we assumed.
One thing I always found interesting, was a talk I heard about how people would use spam efficiently to hurt websites, with one one version being cloning real chat rooms or threads and then deploying them as a bot at a later date. That way messages would seem genuine, because they were at one time, but anyone trying to interact with them would feel very alienated as all of this "real" interaction was happening without acknowledging them. This is probably less of an issue in some cases, but imagine this being used on users of sites that are shadow banned, they can be put into a quarantine where everything they see is something that happened years ago but is being replicated using bots.
We also know many big names in social media buy subscribers as "social proof" and many new fledgling sites use fake interaction and subscriber growth on user accounts to drive early growth. I wouldn't be surprised if just like fiat currency a lot of the social media interaction was being inflated over time using various methods and actual pool of people interacting outside of a very casual glance to look something up was far smaller than we assumed.