WASHINGTON — Automated accounts or 鈥渂ots鈥 play a big role in disseminating information on Twitter, accounting for two-thirds of tweets linking to popular websites, a study showed.
The Pew Research Center report found bots were a major source for diffusing information on news, sports, entertainment and other topics.
The researchers found that of all tweeted links to popular websites, 66% were shared by accounts that appeared to be automated rather than human users.
While bots have gained attention due to concerns over Russian-sponsored manipulation of social media during the 2016 political campaign and for other hot-button topics, the researchers said they made no effort to distinguish between 鈥済ood鈥 or 鈥渂ad鈥 bots.
鈥淭he study does not find evidence that automated accounts currently have a liberal or conservative 鈥榩olitical bias鈥 in their overall link-sharing behavior,鈥 the researchers wrote.
Twitter鈥檚 policy on automated accounts, last updated in November, allows bots to operate but with limitations.
The policy allows for bots to 鈥渁utomatically broadcast helpful information鈥 or 鈥渞un creative campaigns that auto reply to users.鈥
But Twitter鈥檚 rules forbid automatic posts about trending topics or using automation 鈥渢o attempt to influence or manipulate trending topics.鈥 It also bans the use of multiple accounts to generate more activity.
鈥淭hese findings illustrate the extent to which bots play a prominent and pervasive role in the social media environment,鈥 says Pew researcher Aaron Smith.
鈥淎utomated accounts are far from a niche phenomenon: They share a significant portion of tweeted links to even the most prominent and mainstream publications and online outlets. Since these accounts can impact the information people see on social media, it is important to have a sense their overall prevalence on social media.鈥
Pew researchers said some examples of automated accounts included a Netflix bot which tweets when new shows are added to the online streaming service, and another which posts random images from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
CNN operates a 鈥渂reaking news鈥 bot and the New York Times has one that provides live analysis of NFL games.
Pew also found that an unusually large share of 鈥渁dult content鈥 is retweeted by bots, accounting for 90% of links to popular adult sites.
That coincides with findings from other researchers on campaigns of 鈥減ornbots鈥 which advertise sex and pornographic websites.
The Pew report examined some 1.2 million English language tweets linking to 2,315 of the most popular websites in a six-week period in mid-2017. — AFP