Culture It’s time to end “trending” on Twitter - At best, it’s worthless — and at worst, it’s actively harmful

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By now you’ve probably read enough about the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, his death in a Manhattan jail, and the attendant conspiracy theories that consumed social networks over the weekend. President Trump led the charge, retweeting a conspiracy theory that sought to implicate former President Bill Clinton.

While there is much blame to go around, Charlie Warzel finds that Twitter bears a special responsibility for what one researcher termed “the Disinformation World Cup.” Warzel writes:
At the heart of the online fiasco is Twitter, which has come to largely program the political conversation and much of the press. Twitter is magnetic during huge breaking stories; news junkies flock to it for up-to-the-second information. But early on, there’s often a vast discrepancy between the attention that is directed at the platform and the available information about the developing story. That gap is filled by speculation and, via its worst users, rumormongering and conspiracy theories.

On Saturday, Twitter’s trending algorithms hoovered up the worst of this detritus, curating, ranking and then placing it in the trending module on the right side of its website. Despite being a
highly arbitrary and mostly “worthless metric,” trending topics on Twitter are often interpreted as a vague signal of the importance of a given subject.

This hands-off approach to editorial intervention in the news cycle, coupled with algorithms that promote the most popular posts, is by now a familiar villain. It played a key role in, for example, the promotion of anti-vaccine zealots on Facebook, and the growth of Alex Jones’ audience on YouTube. The Epstein case was already a conspiracy theorist’s dream before he apparently hanged himself in his jail cell; in the early hours after his death, when little information was still available, Twitter was a perfect petri dish for proposing and amplifying outrageous conspiracy theories.

As Warzel points out, Twitter amplified those conspiracies via its trending algorithm, which has long since outlived its usefulness. Brian Feldman explained why in 2018:
The first problem with “trending” is that it selects and highlights content with no eye toward accuracy, or quality. Automated trending systems are not equipped to make judgments; they can determine if things are being shared, but they cannot determine whether that content should be shared further. [...]

This is the other problem of “trending,” conceptually: It’s eminently gameable, but the platforms that use the term never make the rules clear. “Trending” is given the imprimatur of authority — videos or topics handed down from on high, scientifically determined to have trended — when really it’s a cobbled-together list of content being obsessively shared or tweeted about by people who love Justin Bieber. Or Logan Paul. Or who believe in crisis actors.


Removing algorithmically generated modules of trending content would deny bad actors an easily gamed avenue for delivering hoaxes to platforms’ user bases. A more modest approach might be to build editorial teams that keep watch over trending hashtags and remove obvious hoaxes and conspiracy theories.

But what if that were ... illegal?

That’s the question I had after reading coverage of the White House’s vague but unsettling plan to have the Federal Communications Commission and Federal Trade Commission police censorship on social networks. Brian Fung saw a partial draft:
The draft order, a summary of which was obtained by CNN, calls for the FCC to develop new regulations clarifying how and when the law protects social media websites when they decide to remove or suppress content on their platforms. Although still in its early stages and subject to change, the Trump administration’s draft order also calls for the Federal Trade Commission to take those new policies into account when it investigates or files lawsuits against misbehaving companies. Politico first reported the existence of the draft.

If put into effect, the order would reflect a significant escalation by President Trump in his frequent attacks against social media companies over an alleged but unproven systemic bias against conservatives by technology platforms. And it could lead to a significant reinterpretation of a law that, its authors have insisted, was meant to give tech companies broad freedom to handle content as they see fit.


Fung talks to experts who describe the plan variously as “horrible” and “makes no sense.” No one seems to think that the FCC or FTC want to do this work, or could do this work, either practically or constitutionally. It’s just one more disturbing idea floated by the Trump Administration that leaves us all wondering whether to take it seriously, literally, or not at all.

I believe you can’t have editorial neutrality without having Nazis and other purveyors of hate speech and abuse. I also believe that restricting platforms from moderating content beyond what is required by law would threaten their businesses — Nazis have a way of chasing away users and advertisers.

It would be heartening if Twitter took this moment to retire trending topics and take other concrete steps to slow the spread of conspiracy theories. But the White House’s aggressive saber rattling would seem to make that less likely.
Lol, what drugs are you on? Sure the constant Epstein conspiracy theories are annoying, but the fact is that there is far more liberal propaganda in the Twitter trending feed than anything actually harmful imo.
 
Weird how the author doesn't bring up that there was a hashtag blaming Trump as well when the one blaming Clinton was trending.

Really makes you think.
 
Weird how the author doesn't bring up that there was a hashtag blaming Trump as well when the one blaming Clinton was trending.

Really makes you think.
it actually replaced it, even though having way less people saying it. Also all of the #TrumpBodyCount tweets came from California, which is twitters HQ
 
I thought this was about "Fresco" trending.

it actually replaced it, even though having way less people saying it. Also all of the #TrumpBodyCount tweets came from California, which is twitters HQ

These people can't even hide their own tracks.
 
Trending wouldn't be a problem if they wouldn't use it as some little mind-melding tool and just let it be straight up what it is. Things that get talked about a lot, no matter what Twitter's moral judgment of them may be, trend. It should be and could be that simple. However, Twitter cannot leave well enough alone. Its not hands-off, it is already curated, they are suppressing things they dislike and promoting and even creating things they like. Look at how #ClintonBodyCount was at least 6 times more popular than #TrumpBodyCount, and was the most popular formulation of the "body count" notion after the announcement that Epstein had died in custody. The only state where #TrumpBodyCount was mentioned more than #ClintonBodyCount was Twitter's HQ state of California. Twitter has routinely suppressed and banned topics they dislike from trending. Its clear-cut editorializing, but hundreds of examples of this aren't enough to keep these brazen liars from swearing for social and legal purposes to Congress that they are "neutral platforms."
 
I don't use twitter (except to screenshot lolcows) but I remember seeing Null mention in the chat that Twitter manually removed the trending tag for the Clintons killing Epstein and leaving the one implying Trump did up.

What these leftist shitbags want, as everyone knows, is for twitter to do even more to manually censor shit they don't want the cattle seeing or talking about.
 
I'd agree but twitter tards would just migrate to another app/website
Would they, though? Where would they migrate to?
Once their access to their followers collapses(not likely someone's going to remember all 1,000+ people they're following) they have next to nothing. Facebook? It's a really clunky site to use today and posts are much more confined than Twitter.
Killing Twitter, while beneficial, will all but remove its unique form of international bite-sized discussion on the internet. It's doubtful another site will take its place with anything similar since it was dumb luck a shitposting service took off in the first place.
 
Why should accuracy or quality come into play at all? If its trending, its trending. If its something you don't like? Too bad, the people have spoken. What is the point of trending if its going to be sold and curated? Let trends trend or let trends end.

The fundamental flaw with all social media, it has to be open to everyone, AND, bereft of even the most innocuous insensitivity. And the dopes in charge think such is not only desirable, but, can be done.
 
Isn't that the best outcome? Let them be the next nomads of the Internet. Let them establish their own insane leftchans. Maybe some of them will come here to generate some fresh cow material.
I don't want them invading my spaces >:(
 
I would support to get the option to turn it off. It just pushes things I don't care about. It just takes up space, bad interface design.
 
>years of Russia collusion conspiracies

fine

>years of screeching about impeaching trump for every contrived reason under the sun

fine

>lots of people have a big thunk about the Clintons being involved with how Epstein died in a very suspicious way

BURN IT ALL DOWN REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

I haven't used Twitter in years. It's such a dramatic shithole, but you can't use the internet without it somehow sneaking its way into your life. I really can't wait until it finally dies.
 
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