Just 6% of US Adults On Twitter Account For 73% of Political Tweets, Study Finds (techcrunch.com) 80
A small number of prolific U.S. Twitter users create the majority of tweets, and that extends to Twitter discussions around politics, according to a new report from the Pew Research Center out today. Building on an earlier study, which discovered that 10% of users created 80% of tweets from U.S. adults, the organization today says that just 6% of U.S. adults on Twitter account for 73% of tweets about national politics. TechCrunch reports: Though your experience on Twitter may differ, based on who you follow, the majority of Twitter users don't mention politics in their tweets. In fact, Pew found that 69% never tweeted about politics or tweeted about the topic just once. Meanwhile, across all tweets from U.S. adults, only 13% of tweets were focused on national politics. The study was based on 1.1 million public tweets from June 2018 to June 2019, Pew says (2,427 users participated).
Only 22% of U.S. adults even have a Twitter account, and of those, only 31% are defined as "political tweeters" -- that is, they've posted at least five tweets and have posted at least twice about politics during the study period. Within this broader group of political tweeters, just 6% are defined as "prolific" -- meaning they've posted at least 10 tweets and at least 25% of their tweets mention national politics. This small subset then goes on to create 73% of all tweets from U.S. adults on the subject of national politics. What's concerning about the data is that it's those who are either far to the left or far to the right who are the ones dominating the political conversation on Twitter's platform. A majority of the prolific political tweeters (55%) say they identify as either "very liberal" or "every conservative." Among the non-political tweeting crowd, only 28% chose a more polarized label for themselves. The report goes on to say that the polarized subgroup heavily leans left. "For example, those who strongly approve of President Trump generated 25% of all tweets mentioning national politics. But those who strongly disapprove of Trump generated 72% of all tweets mentioning national politics. (They're also responsible for 80% of all tweets from U.S. adults on the platform.)"
Only 22% of U.S. adults even have a Twitter account, and of those, only 31% are defined as "political tweeters" -- that is, they've posted at least five tweets and have posted at least twice about politics during the study period. Within this broader group of political tweeters, just 6% are defined as "prolific" -- meaning they've posted at least 10 tweets and at least 25% of their tweets mention national politics. This small subset then goes on to create 73% of all tweets from U.S. adults on the subject of national politics. What's concerning about the data is that it's those who are either far to the left or far to the right who are the ones dominating the political conversation on Twitter's platform. A majority of the prolific political tweeters (55%) say they identify as either "very liberal" or "every conservative." Among the non-political tweeting crowd, only 28% chose a more polarized label for themselves. The report goes on to say that the polarized subgroup heavily leans left. "For example, those who strongly approve of President Trump generated 25% of all tweets mentioning national politics. But those who strongly disapprove of Trump generated 72% of all tweets mentioning national politics. (They're also responsible for 80% of all tweets from U.S. adults on the platform.)"
How do they define ... (Score:1, Insightful)
Covfefe!
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Shit, people are getting paid to spew online?! Does anybody know how to go about this? But seriously though, Twitter is cancer. I have no idea why we haven't done away with it. Clearly, people have a preference for cancer.
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Who pays Antifa to tweet?
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How do they define US? I would be less surprised if they told me that Russian bots were responsible for 73% of political tweets, quite frankly.
That's why it's so easy to drown out wrongthink (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: That's why it's so easy to drown out wrongthin (Score:2)
Mob persistence is what matters in that medium. And we should each weigh the opinions we find there accordingly. (Send to the circular file)
The trouble I have with my family is the Internet is this great new thing, and they easily accept any garbage they see on it as fact. Television was a recognized misinformation engine, but we've gone from the age of steam to nuclear powered rockets in the span of 20 years when it comes to how we choose to consume information.
I'm skeptical that society will find an equil
Re: That's why it's so easy to drown out wrongthi (Score:1)
The voiceless (people you wouldn't want to listen to anyways) tainted everything and put a stop to that pretty quickly over the past decade.
I don't think you can find any more public venues where you can get 100 honest opinions on any given topic. That was in the brochure for the Internet, but we're far from it.
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Suck it up dude. The majority, well, they are not just that bright, not their fault, it's genetic their brains quite simply factually do not work as well as yours. The 100IQ denotes how quickly they can learn and how much they can learn, below 100IQ is a whole different world to above 100IQ, that's a little close, lets say, below 90IQ is an entirely different world to above 110IQ, those two groups actually do in reality see the world entirely differently, the 110IQ and over having an entirely different leve
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I remember back during the information age when everything on the Internet was gold.
I remember back when nobody took the nerds that used computers very seriously. Now that those nerds are billionaires people decided to take them seriously. Big mistake! Gut instinct was right in this case.
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Now do Slashdot! (Score:4, Interesting)
That kind of lopsided history is probably very typical for most social media, and even outside of the Internet. 10% of accounts are responsible for 80% of /. comments. 6% of addresses are responsible for 73% of filesystem-oriented emails to the Linux Kernel Mailing List. 8% of talking heads are responsible for 68% of the hot air on evening television. So on and so forth, across domains -- Vilfredo Pareto would not be surprised if he were writing on economics today.
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Well there is the Hall of Fame: https://slashdot.org/hof.shtml [slashdot.org]
Unfortunately it doesn't show who the top commentators are.
Anti-Trump != Leftist (Score:5, Interesting)
The report goes on to say that the polarized subgroup heavily leans left. "For example, those who strongly approve of President Trump generated 25% of all tweets mentioning national politics. But those who strongly disapprove of Trump generated 72% of all tweets mentioning national politics.
I've never used Twitter, so I'm not actually in those numbers.
However, I am decidedly right of center, but strongly disapprove of President Trump.
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I don't think this article (or the GP) is saying anything about right/left political associations one way or the other.
It does make it sound like twitter is a political echo chamber, though. That's pretty disturbing, if perhaps not surprising.
Re: Anti-Trump != Leftist (Score:1)
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I tend to agree. He's not a normal politician, for good or bad. Although he is pro-low-business-tax and anti-business-regulation; his trade and visa worker stances conflict with most pro-business politicians.
And in foreign policy, he's more libertarian than conservative, although he seems to react different ways to different countries and their leaders, making it hard to find a big picture. His style appears situational and transactional (I'll scratch your back if you scr
Re: Anti-Trump != Leftist (Score:2)
Lindsey Graham on Trump in 2015 "Heâ(TM)s a race-baiting, xenophobic religious bigot. He doesnâ(TM)t represent my party."
It's on video, I don't know what's changed since with Graham, but I haven't seen a change in Trump.
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Re: Anti-Trump != Leftist (Score:2, Insightful)
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You got modded Flamebait, but this is exactly where we are. It's deranged lunacy.
In Clown World, unpopular truths are flamebait. Honk honk.
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You also have to wonder how Trump's base demographic compares to the national average when it come to being on Twitter. Maybe his supporters just aren't on that site.
How many are (Score:3, Insightful)
With lots of ads and tracking?
Push some SJW story, get the clicks, show the number of clicks as their 'ability' to sell ads and do productive publishing work?
The clicks are from their own fellow journalists who have to virtue signalling that that saw the story..
Get the next SJW story ready?
It all worked until the brands find out their "political" friendly ads are not selling in the numbers expected as its not actual consumers doing the clicking
Wonder what the rest of the internet is doing for actual fun? Its not clicking on SJW brand ads.
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It looks like you're suffering from SJWDS. You should have that looked at.
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Pretending that SJW's don't exist is kinda silly. I mean even the core of Vox and Vice call themselves that.
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While I find 'SJWDS' amusing, replace 'SJW' in his post with 'clickbait' and it has some credibility.
It happens that much of the clickbait tends to represent polarised politics.
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While I find 'SJWDS' amusing, replace 'SJW' in his post with 'clickbait' and it has some credibility.
That's exactly my point. His SJWDS caused him to write SJW three times instead.
Re: How many are (Score:1)
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Classic whooo0o0ooosh!
Re: How many are (Score:2)
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Who is paying for the content to be posted?
Other nations? People who need the clicks back to their own work to sell ads?
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I love your posts. They are a kind of rambling train-of-though, a unique insight into the mind of the anti-SJW demographic.
The other 94% of adults ... (Score:2)
... believe that shit.
The real shame ... (Score:2)
... is that anyone on Twitter takes it seriously.
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That's okay. I don't take Twitter seriously.
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You want real rage?
Disconnect cable systems' feeds.
Unless you’re famous (Score:1)
There’s no point in posting on Twitter. It’s like yelling into the void.
Though, on occasion, I criticize our moron-in-chief. I’m fairly certain no one ever actually reads it, but it makes me feel better. Because, you know, working for real political change takes actual time and effort, but bitching on Twitter I can do from my phone.
Re: Unless you’re famous (Score:1)
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I’m fairly certain no one ever actually reads it, but it makes me feel better.
You might be surprised who ends up reading those posts one day. Things people wrote over a decade ago have come back to bite them in the ass.
Why bother posting something that can be used against you in the future? It's probably better to just remain silent; the Internet never forgets.
That would be my sister in law (Score:2)
One long political rant.
Thankgving dinner, online (Score:1)
It's the same human behaviors, just with Le Twittre as the medium of choice.
Just 6% of adults? (Score:2)
Glad to see the other 94% have better things to do.
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In my experience only roughly 10% of adults actively follow politics beyond consuming generic news. Twitter's stats generally reflect this. The vast majority of people only casually care about politics.
Sockpuppets and Bots (Score:1)
The majority of these are not adults. They are sockpuppet and bot accounts. I am guessing the reason why Pew found what they did ("those who strongly disapprove of Trump generated 72% of all tweets mentioning national politics.") is because inveterate sleaze bomber David Brock [thenation.com] has been taking in reams of money to engage in such activity, since prior to 2016.
Through my observations, there is a propaganda machine run through ShareBlue that disseminates the content. That is then amplified through a network o
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I just took a closer look at the Pew methodology, and given the way they did the study, perhaps I am wrong to claim their study did not primarily sample adults. Unclear how they accounted for and whether they properly factored out the sockpuppet accounts, but that's a different issue.
Abandon Twitter, Trump's Propoganda Machine (Score:2, Flamebait)
10% of users... (Score:4, Insightful)
10% of users account for 80% of Tweets in the first place, so that's not an extremely off-the-scale result, is it?
so what.. we already know about the silent maj. (Score:3)
Still a better social network (Score:2)
PT Barnum is again affirmed. (Score:4)
So fucking what?
That's not a problem. The problem is the X% of US adults who get their political views from Twitter, rather than collecting multiple viewpoints, contrasting them with their own, and making an intelligent decision.
Perhaps literacy tests aren't such a bad thing, despite the history.
That applies to both "sides."
Re: PT Barnum is again affirmed. (Score:1)
Twitter is also about collecting viewpoints (Score:2)
It's like that online and offline.. A minority of the people is doing all the talking. Most people limit themselves by choosing between them because they don't feel eloquent enough to do their own talking. If you have dumb ideas you'll follow dumb twitter accounts. Others can be very sophisticated without saying a word. Twitter is talking. If a twitter account points you towards an interesting resource then what is the problem with that?
A lot of effort goes into controlling these 'influencers', the talkativ
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Isn't listening to a wide variety of news sources and views a good thing? Would you prefer they stick to the dreaded Mainstream Media?
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Also sounds suspicious. 6% of the US population is around 20 million.
Twitter is bubble reinforcement (Score:4)
I see the medium as enhancing the tendency of politicized activists on any topic to only talk with fellow sycophants. It converts normally frangible political bubbles into unpierceable carbon fiber. It's the bully's best weapon since the invention of the sneer.
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That's no fun though. You have to follow people from the other side so you can argue with them. That's what Twitter is, it's that Monty Python Argument Clinic sketch brought to life.
These aren't 'prolific posters' (Score:1)
They have teams. Organized. Intentional. If you've been convinced these are mostly one philosophical or the other, you're mostly wrong. Every movement has some.
Of course, other channels and media are very helpful to them. Still, it's an organized system.
My point is that no media is trustworthy. Not MSM, text, Twitter, FB, etc. None.
Um, yeah? (Score:2)
It's ludicrous that Twitter ever had any political influence to begin with. It's nothing but a glorified blog with weird post length limitations. .
Twitter only ever had the significance that you gave it. I mean I understand that writing a "people said stuff on Twitter" story is a lot easier than writing an actual news story, but was it worth it?
Proving once again... (Score:3)
That 72% of Trump Twitter Tweets are generated by Twits.
Sorry, it was just sitting there begging to be picked up.
Eleanor Roosevelt (Score:2)
Eleanor Roosevelt talked about great minds talking about ideas, while average minds talk about events, and weak minds discuss people.
6% of Twitter engages in great conversation, evidently.
Power Law (Score:2)
Oh Wow, the have discovered the Power law https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
OMG: Another Pareto Distribution News Story (Score:1)