top | item 27582541

(no title)

heroHACK17 | 4 years ago

We actually do know what, or who, the denominator is. A large majority of tweets come from a small minority of tweeters: roughly 10% of tweeters account for roughly 80% of all tweets on the platform [1].

[1] https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2019/04/24/sizing-up-tw...

discuss

order

koheripbal|4 years ago

I bet if you look specifically at "cancelling" mob type activity, the % is much much more concentrated.

There are disproportionately loud participants on Twitter that push a toxic narrative.

prepend|4 years ago

What I meant is denominator of responses.

If I have 10,000 followers and post something with 100 likes, that might mean 100 people saw it and everyone liked it. It might mean 10,000 saw it and 9,900 hated it. It might mean 500 saw it, 100 liked, 100 hated, 300 didn’t care. Etc etc.

This would help understand if it’s just a few loud people or indicative of all the people.