Twitter鈥檚 crackdown on fake accounts will make you look less popular
TWITTERATI, get ready for your digital ego to be bruised.
The social media company warned on Wednesday that its crackdown on fake accounts means users will have fewer followers.
When Twitter, Inc. detects sudden changes in behavior, like spammy tweeting patterns or sharing of misleading web links, it contacts the owner to confirm control of the account. If the owner doesn鈥檛 respond and reset their password, Twitter locks the account. This week, the company said it will remove these from profiles, reducing the number of followers users have.
鈥淢ost people will see a change of four followers or fewer; others with larger follower counts will experience a more significant drop,鈥 Vijaya Gadde, Twitter鈥檚 head of legal, policy, trust and safety, wrote in a blog. 鈥淔ollower counts are a visible feature, and we want everyone to have confidence that the numbers are meaningful and accurate.鈥
The company recently said it鈥檚 identifying almost 10 million dubious accounts a week and is putting all accounts through a security check. The stock slumped earlier this week on concern the crackdown would dent user growth. While it excludes spam accounts in reported user data, Twitter noted early this year that monthly active user numbers would be 鈥渘egatively impacted鈥 by efforts to expunge fake accounts.
Removing locked accounts from follower counts won鈥檛 impact Twitter鈥檚 monthly or daily active user metrics, the company said on Wednesday.
鈥淥ur digital ecosystem is being polluted by a growing number of fake user accounts, so Twitter鈥檚 commitment to cleaning up the digital space should be welcomed wholeheartedly by everyone, from users of the platforms, to creators and advertisers,鈥 Unilever Chief Marketing Officer Keith Weed wrote in an e-mail to Bloomberg. 鈥淧eople having an artificially inflated follower count made up of bots and redundant accounts is at best deceiving and at worst, fraud.鈥
Unilever was among the major companies that threatened in February to pull advertising from social media services, including Twitter, because of a rise in hate speech, abusive content and fake news. Bloomberg LP produces TicToc, a global breaking news network on Twitter. 鈥 Bloomberg


