Dan LaMorte lost 500 Twitter followers last weekend. As a comedian,Sister he made a joke of it.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Actress Adina Porter, known for her roles in True Bloodand American Horror Story, responded to LaMorte's tweet with her own experience:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Coincidence? It's difficult to tell, but the drop for both users did come shorty after a New York Timesinvestigation named influential figures who had purchased fake Twitter followers, and exposed a service called Devumi which provides them.
SEE ALSO: Why Twitter's future just got even darkerTwitter responded to the New York Timesstory prior to its publication, saying it's aware of the problem and has a team that addresses spam and bot accounts.
When contacted by Mashable, Twitter did not have an update on whether or not it had boosted efforts to take down bots, other than a tweet specifically calling out Devumi.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But cases over the weekend seem to point toward a so-called "purge" of bots. For those influencers, it's not necessarily a bad thing. A decrease in followers can be upsetting, but it shows authenticity and transparency rather than conflating high numbers with someone's genuine influence.
"Brands want to invest in social media without damage," said Bijoy Patel, founder of CompuBrain, a service for analyzing influence on Facebook and Twitter. "They want to know there's real engagement."
When asked if he had lost followers like that before, the comedian LaMorte told Mashable, "I mean on the Instagram purge of 2014 I lost a lot. I remember a few occasions losing batches of Twitter followers. Aesthetically it looks frightening, but overall I like getting rid of the bad apples. I’m interested to see if it keeps going down."
LaMorte was referencing a December 2014 event when Facebook's Instagram deleted inactive and spam accounts, causing influential users like Justin Bieber to lose 3.5 million followers.
Perhaps Twitter did the same, quietly, over the weekend.
Angelo Ray Gomez, a political figure in Nevada who was the youngest person to run for mayor in the state, saw an unexpected drop over the weekend, as well.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Gomez now has 43,500 followers, but he's had far more. He showed Mashable screenshots of his account with 51,900 followers one minute and 47,300 followers the next.
The decrease in followers over the weekend doesn't immediately imply that Gomez — or any user who was affected — had purchased fake followers. Martha Lane Fox, a Twitter board member named in theNYT piece, blamed a rogue employee for buying her followers.
"My followers on Twitter skyrocketed when I got a lot of media attention during the presidential election and when I ran for mayor at 19 years old," Gomez said.
"I didn’t know who was real or not but many of my followers have contributed to my past mayoral campaign and when I raised funds to go to the inauguration. This gave me confidence I had genuine followers," he continued.
But Twitter is a land of bots. That's not news. Pop star Katy Perry has bots. President Donald Trump has bots. Sean Hannity has bots, as a NYTreporter behind the investigation tweeted:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
I probably have bots. But there's nothing I — or really any of these Twitter users — can do about it. It's up to Twitter to detect them and take down the accounts. In some cases, the company has been doing that, especially with regards to bots linked to Russia.
Twitter cofounder and CEO Jack Dorsey has addressed the network's bot problem in the past but has called it minimal.
When asked by an analyst on the company's earnings call in April 2017, Dorsey cited a statistic, first released in 2014, that 5 percent of Twitter accounts are spam related. Studies have said otherwise. For example, researchers at the University of Southern California and the University of Indiana reported that as many as 15 percent of Twitter accounts may be run by bots. Though, not every bot is harmful. Mashable's Mark Kaufman's favorite Twitter account is a bot.
But Dorsey said in that earnings call that the company does have the means to shut these bots down. It's just a matter of whether or not they want to. And so, we wait.
Topics Social Media X/Twitter Celebrities
David Berman, Slacker God by Erin SomersStaff Picks: Free Verse, Farewells, and Fist City by The Paris ReviewWordle today: The answer and hints for December 11Remembering Toni by The Paris ReviewA Refusal to Defend or Even Stick Up for the Art of the Short Story by Peter OrnerOn Seeing, Waking, and Being Woke by Jess RowStaff Picks: Barbecues, Beyoncé, and the Bourgeoisie by The Paris ReviewStaff Picks: Free Verse, Farewells, and Fist City by The Paris ReviewThe Caribbean’s Deadliest Fruit: A Taste Test by Jonathan EscofferyThe Aesthetic Beauty of Math by Karen OlssonHow Stanley Kubrick Staged the Moon Landing by Rich CohenThe Silhouette Artist by Amy Jo BurnsI Am the Mother of This Eggshell by Sabrina Orah MarkStaff Picks: Fathers, Fleabag, and the French Toast of Agony by The Paris ReviewA Primer for Forgetting by Lewis HydeIt’s not just you. ChatGPT is ‘lazier,’ OpenAI confirmed.Poetry Rx: Forgive Me, Open Wounds by Sarah KayDavid Berman, Slacker God by Erin Somers5 ways AI changed the internet in 2023Writers’ Fridges: Jia Tolentino by Jia Tolentino 5 tragedies throughout history that Obama really should've handled better Apple gives older iPhones the gift of FaceTime HD Hinge rolls out new features including Roses. Yes, like 'The Bachelor'. Trump tweets about Texas floods, waits 15 minutes, then attacks media Couple finally completes 40 SpaceX's Starlink receives $886 million from FCC to improve rural internet Activists demand Google open up about user data shared with police Apple launches AirPods Max headphones and they are not cheap Seth Rogen expertly trolls fervent Trump supporter on Twitter Twitter just made securing your account way more convenient Clever dude scored amazing seats at the Mayweather vs McGregor fight by posing as a bodyguard Woman's nasty tweet about an engagement ring sparks a debate about whether size really matters Trump Rat pops up close to the White House Tesla's Berlin Gigafactory may be delayed by hibernating snakes I love my embarrassing lumbar support pillow 'Trumping' is the newest and best way to shut things down on Tinder Hold Steady: The strangely sweet community of a virtual rock show November 2020 was the warmest November on record Is your iPhone draining battery fast after iOS 14.2? You're not alone. College students, rejoice! You can now get a semester's worth of free premium porn