In an analysis of more than 35 million public posts containing links that were shared billions of times on the social media platform between 2017 and 2020, the researchers at Penn State found that around 75% of the shares were made without the posters clicking the link first. Of these, political con...
A new study of 35 million news links circulated on Facebook reports that more than 75% of the time they were shared without the link being clicked upon and read
I feel like 90% of people will only look at the first part of a thing tho.
Book titles get read more than the book
Movie posters get seen more than the movie
Album covers get seen more than the album gets listened too.
I did just pull all of this out of my ass though
E: having read the article they're talking about sharing an article not just reading it which would be different since I don't think many people recommend other media they haven't consumed
Me attempting to take the time to read twenty poorly formatted articles per day, broken up into fourteen paragraphs each and seperated by what I assume are intended to be hundreds of intrusive ads and completely diverging from what the headline baited me into thinking this ad (er.. article..) was about in the first place:
The findings, which the researchers said suggest that social media users tend to merely read headlines and blurbs rather than fully engage with core content, appeared today (Nov. 19) in Nature Human Behavior. While the data were limited to Facebook, the researchers said the findings could likely map to other social media platforms and help explain why misinformation can spread so quickly online.
This implies all social media users. Later it mentions sharing information.
If I cared , I would read the paper. I think the author didn't do a very good job from headline on.
And there are a bajillion of them, and all completely random. You could read for the rest of your life and not get through a single day's worth of shared articles. That said, you really should read something before sharing it. That part is just stupid.
If it makes anyone feel any better, the researchers didn't click the links either.
To determine the political content of shared links, the researchers in this study used machine learning, a form of artificial intelligence, to identify and classify political terms in the link content.
Because Facebook isn't treated seriously like a news format, a lot of my friends don't go on Facebook to read the news, and neither do I. Most of the time, articles are only posted to drive a certain narrative, that's how Facebook works.
And yes a lot of the time I don't read a news article past the headline. Mostly is because I'm bombarded with "PLZ ACCEPT COOKIES AND WE GIV U NO CHOICE TO DISAGREE" some of the time. The screen grays out. Some news outlets blur some of the article. I'm nagged to subscribe and shit.
Why the fuck would I then want to read it? I'll only read what I'm interested in, I don't want to read an entire article of "oops, the world sucks today" or "Trump is fucking things up again" or "uh you're going to hell" and whatever. Why would I want to read that in-depth?
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Yup. If I actually want to read an article and it isn't a site I already know isn't too bad, I'll right click copy the link and put it in the archive machine to get to a readable version of it. I really don't think they can blame us at this point for not wanting to click every shitty clickbait headline, nor is it necessarily a bad thing that people aren't (especially people who don't use adblock and just accept cookies to make the shit go away. With the quality of reporting on most of these sites, they're definitely not getting a good deal)
In addition, analyses with 2,969 false uniform resource locators revealed higher shares and, hence, SwoCs [Shares without Clicks] by conservatives (76.94%) than liberals (14.25%), probably because, in our dataset, the vast majority (76–82%) of them originated from conservative news domains.