Which social media / platforms are flooded by bots the most?
Business Marketing with Nika
19 replies
The essence of social media is that you are social. π€
But as more and more communication becomes robotic, will it make sense to be there?
β More comments are generated by AI.
β Also, social networks are starting to use AI to summarize comments (the need arose because people don't want to read those long comments that they know are created by artificial intelligence anyway, see YouTube and Meta β they are already testing summarisations)
β Communication will increasingly begin to move to DM because of that.
Which social networks will face an outflow of people who will no longer want to spend time there for this? Which will be the first?
My personal guesses (Twitter, PH π
)
Replies
AndrΓ© J@sentry_co
For SoMe to become more genuine again, more strict rate limits will have to be implemented. But big companies move slow, so I think there will be 1-2 years now where it's a free for all. Rate limits, social points, anti gpt speak filters will be implemented. I think.
Share
@busmark_w_nika Yes, accounts with proven social points, will get increased rate limits. I.e: Like here on PH. it's easy to gauge which accounts are genuine and bring value, same with stackoverflow, a lot of social point gamification built in. And when your account on stackoverflow gets powerful, you get more admin control, and can shape the platform. This encourages gd behaviour. But not in a Orwellian 1984 kind of "good behaviour" way π
@busmark_w_nika With power comes responsibility. If you want to ruin your reputation, go ahead. the social status will go down immediately. And your reach will be revoked. There are many ways to encourage good behaviour. Nudge theory. Badges like here on PH, where makers are only allowed a finite amount they can give out, so they have to pick wisely. Finite is the clue here. On stackoverflow, you genuinely have to provide some really stellar answers to get points for them. GPT answers are banned outright. Ive never seen a gpt answer on stackoverflow. Altho I don't visit it that much anymore since I use copilot that use in indirectly π
. But sometimes I do because I need some deeper insight than copilot can comprehend. I have about 5k points on stackoverflow, gained passively over 10 years. I have power there, I can edit things without any approval. And I would never jepordize it. it's very valuable. Also my answers are history, people can see all my activity since day1. And see that I'm helpful, and non-passive aggressive etc. Which is important for a devs rep in general. nothing beats imperial evidence.
@busmark_w_nika Its self-policing. Even if we get AGI level AI's. We will just revert to pseudo social identities, you already see it on LinkedIn, how they really want to scan your passport rfid chip via your iPhone an authenticate you, they literally try to trick you to do that by telling people their reach will increase. the principle is from life it self. 99% of people behave In real life because of various social contracts. So the digital realm will mimic that more and more. pure digital identities that are not tied to humans won't exist on SoMe soon. If you make this connection, you also know that there is a grace period right now for maybe 24months, where it's the Wild West and you can roam free a bit, with limits of course. But once things gets locked down, even doing micro automations and micro growth hacking won't work. so now is the time to build SoMe positions. personal brands etc.
I think PH has as many as LinkedIn, but on Li there is a bigger proportion of normal human comments so it gets balanced a bit
Overlap
I can't lie, sometimes I use ChatGPT to make sense of my thoughts. Like, I will write it up and say to ChatGPT, "Make this better: [insert thoughts]" And then it takes a lot of finessing to get it just right, but I think that is okay. What do you think?
Product Hunt for sure..
I completely agree. It's incredibly frustrating that in most situations nowadays, you're not communicating with people directly.
Therefore, my guess is that the future will be... entirely audio communication. It could be one of the current platforms or a completely new social network, but it will be based on audio communication. This is because voice and sentence structure convey emotion, which is difficult for AI to generate (or it will sound totally fake). That's why Twitter Spaces are a unique opportunity to connect with real people.
@busmark_w_nika probably current social media platforms will be a better option.
Starting from scratch is much harder.
Maybe you're right. Last week, there was a Youtuber - IShowSpeed who was in Europe. He did livestream from 10+ countires. And more than 200-300k. people watched every stream live. He has 26m.+ followers on Youtube.
Tidyread
Agreed, PH's comment section is the most likely to be flooded with bots.
I think it depends on each person's purpose. Some people just want to discover some good products with potential, and those people will be more willing to comment honestly. More people want to increase their influence so that more people know about their products, and these people will probably use AI to generate comments quickly. in the beginning, I would use AI, but gradually I realised that sincerity is the only thing that will get me sincerity, so now I always think for myself and comment!
Facebook for me! Every time I post anything on our company page, I get bombarded with bots messages 'We're shutting down your page in 24h for policy violation'.
Twitter but now i am seeing it on PH as well π€¦ββοΈ
Twitter seems most flooded with bots right now, especially since Elon took over. Wouldn't be surprised if people start leaving due to all the spam. YouTube comments are another cesspool of low-effort AI-generated posts, though at least they're trying to summarize them now. I think DMs and smaller niche communities will grow as people look for more genuine interaction. Curious to see how this all plays out! πΏ
I'd say Facebook probably has most bots. The audience there is probably older than, say, Instagram or Tiktok. Which means they'd be more unlikely to differentiate bots. Like how scammers operate by calling old people who're likely less tech savvy or people who don't know much about banking/finance. But this is just a guess, don't have any numbers.
A considerable number of followers is beneficial in terms of visibility because social media platformsβ algorithms focus on larger active rates. However, it is important to note that quality is more important than quantity β it is good to have a large number of followers but it is better if these are interactive and real followers. I also use topfollowapkapp.com which is the Instagram followers app for boosting my Instagram account fans for the steady growth of the loyal and active community.
I am sharing my experience, and want to educate people that while using any social media network, followers anywhere in the world are important, and now this fast lifestyle you canβt wait for long. Remember these followers or the target-demographic group will help you to create a following around your work. Use these tips wisely so that your account grows in a shorter span of time.
Twitter and Instagram are often cited as being heavily affected by bots. These bots can create fake accounts, post spam, or inflate follower counts. However, other platforms like Facebook and TikTok also face bot-related issues. Social media companies continuously work on improving their detection and removal of these bots to maintain platform integrity.