Facebook "Like" System Devalued By Fake Users 99
New submitter k(wi)r(kipedia) writes "A BBC investigation has found evidence of fake users skewing the results of Facebook's 'Like' recommendation system. The BBC set up a Facebook page for a fake business called VirtualBagel and invited users to 'like' it. The page reportedly attracted 'over 1,600 likes' within twenty-four hours. The test appeared to confirm the claims of a social media marketing consultant who contacted the BBC after he noticed a disparity in the distribution of users 'liking' the products of his clients. 'While they had been targeting Facebook users around the world, all their "likes" appeared to be coming from countries such as the Philippines and Egypt.'"
I like this! (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, and hi from the Philippines! :) We have a very liking culture over here.
Not just the Philippines (Score:3)
In essence people Egypt like stuff they know (Score:1, Redundant)
nothing about.
I actually read the article and still dont really know what this is about.
Why would people just go around liking stuff.
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Its about spam.
Re:In essence people Egypt like stuff they know (Score:5, Informative)
People in Egypt and the Philippines are being paid to click on links. By doing that the client "VirtualBagel" pays more for their advertising service (a facebook page).
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I"m not sure but they seem to be saying Facebook is behind it.
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Plese elaborate - why? Who's spamming whom again?
Everybody and everybody, especially here.
Reddit, Slashdot, and Digg are three of several resources for user-submitted news. Take a browse through a few and get familiar with the platform. In our next blog post, we’ll discuss using these free tools for spreading brand awareness and promoting dialogue about your business.
There are marketing opportunities to harness in social news websites.
http://www.kelownawebdesigns.com/social-media/reddit-slashdot-digg-social-news-websites/ [kelownawebdesigns.com]
http://www.evancarmichael.com/SEO/1455/Social-Media-The-Instant-Brand-Killer.html [evancarmichael.com]
http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/social-media-marketing-allinone-for-dummies-cheat-.html [dummies.com]
Re:In essence people Egypt like stuff they know (Score:5, Informative)
Fake FB accounts are set up and send friend requests to random users. Some FB users will accept any friend request they get. I know a few who do this. If a friend likes something, it shows up in your news feed (which is dumb, why do I care that you like a company?). If you click the link and then like it yourself, the company just gained access to your feed too. And your demographic info. Mission accomplished.
I see this all the time - so-and-so likes Target or Walmart or whatever. It makes me feel kinda bad for those people, because they don't realize how much personal info they give up when they click that little button. It's the same reason I never use FB to log in anywhere - if a site requires FB login only, I don't use it.
Re:In essence people Egypt like stuff they know (Score:5, Interesting)
Probably bots trying to establish a presence and thereby appearing to be a legitimate account when the try to friend people who might accept them even if they don't know them. Once in a friends list they can use it for viral marketing and/or theft of personal data.
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Bots need to feel wanted too.
The scam is simple (Score:5, Interesting)
Facebook lets them send messages to others telling them they 'like' something. So they 'like' it, then get to send the spam message advertising their viagra/rolex/whatever they're trying to sell.
Simple really. If 98% of email is spam, them likely 98% of likes are spam too.
"Earlier this year Facebook revealed that about 5-6% of its 901 million users might be fake - representing up to 54 million profiles."
If 5% of their users are fakes, that's 45 million, if each likes 5000, thats 200 billion fake likes. The bigger question is why do advertisers imagine that Facebook pages are somehow more traffic'd than Internet pages, when every facebook user is an internet user, but not every internet user is a facebook user.
It's like putting adverts in second life, remember that?
Re:The scam is simple (Score:4, Informative)
Facebook lets them send messages to others telling them they 'like' something. So they 'like' it, then get to send the spam message advertising their viagra/rolex/whatever they're trying to sell.
Simple really. If 98% of email is spam, them likely 98% of likes are spam too.
"Earlier this year Facebook revealed that about 5-6% of its 901 million users might be fake - representing up to 54 million profiles."
If 5% of their users are fakes, that's 45 million, if each likes 5000, thats 200 billion fake likes. The bigger question is why do advertisers imagine that Facebook pages are somehow more traffic'd than Internet pages, when every facebook user is an internet user, but not every internet user is a facebook user.
It's like putting adverts in second life, remember that?
Thanks for the explanation because that was definitely not in the BBC article.
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Pity, they've forgotten the 'inform' and 'educate' parts...and as for 'enrich', oh yes, I'm so fucking 'enriched' by Eastenders..
Yes, it's a shame that the BBC's only program is Eastenders.
I'm sorry to say that I fund the abomination that is the BBC through my (compulsory) license fee...
It's not compulsory and it doesn't just fund the BBC. I stopped paying it years ago* and I'm quite happy using on-demand services, which don't require one to pay the licence fee.
...it always amuses me when I hear foreigners go on about how good the BBC news service is, and how unbiased it is etc. bloody etc.
Try listening to the World Service, or even the domestic news, and then tell us all about the bias in the BBC because aside from pandering to the Royal Family and near-continuous promotion of the Olympics I've never noticed any. Alternatively you could take some small measu
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Facebook lets them send messages to others telling them they 'like' something.
How? I only see messages from people who are in my friend list.
I'm not sure what they're implying here but if Facebook charges VirtualBagel by the number of "likes" then the only person who can profit from this is Facebook.
I don't get it (Score:2)
I don't personally use FB, but my wife has a business with a heavily liked Facebook page. She has made the same observation about many of the likes coming from Egypt, Philippines, etc.
From what she's told me, when you "Like" something you can tell your friends, but you have to be friends with them anyway in which case you can already send them messages. Similarly, you can post on the company's page, but you can already do that without "Liking" it (and her page doesn't get very much spam - maybe one message
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They don't. They imagine Facebook users will be easier to track, market to, and (most importantly) market through. Every Facebook user is a potential advertising channel.
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nothing about.
I actually read the article and still dont really know what this is about.
Why would people just go around liking stuff.
Why the hell have I been modded down? Its obviously a valid point as people have replied.
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Why the hell have I been modded down? Its obviously a valid point as people have replied.
Having some replies does not represent the quality of your post, and there is not much to reply to when you make the first post either.
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Why the hell have I been modded down? Its obviously a valid point as people have replied.
Having some replies does not represent the quality of your post, and there is not much to reply to when you make the first post either.
I posted something to do with the article and a question and I was modded down. I just don't get why. I mod all the time. It wasn't frivolous and it was on topic beats a lot of slashdot posts :)
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People are annoyed by the Like buttons and write generators to like any Like button they can find.
Scary thought (Score:5, Funny)
So if I understand this correctly, they're saying that some of the people on Facebook are real?
Re:Scary thought (Score:5, Funny)
I am officially "old" (Score:2)
You become old when new technologies stop making sense to you, and seem silly, unnatural, evil, or just plain valueless.
This exactly describes my opinion of Facebook, despite the fact that it is wildly successful.
Ugh. I am depressed now.
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What to gain? (Score:5, Interesting)
What do fake users gain by Like-ing a fake business page?
Isn't it more effective for fake users to like something that at least gives them some money in some way? I mean, spam lives from money, right?
Re:What to gain? (Score:5, Interesting)
What do fake users gain by Like-ing a fake business page?
As I understand it, once they've "liked" the page, they can then post spam messages on that page.
The irony of course being that this effort is presumably worth-while to the spammers, and thus seems to confirm the argument that some advertising companies are making, that they get better results by just focusing on their own FB page and building a community and not bothering with FB advertising.
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What do fake users gain by Like-ing a fake business page?
If by "fake user", you mean "the person behind the fake account", then there could be any number of reasons. First, they might not know the business is fake. In that case, they could just be liking *everything*, hoping that something good will come of that. There's no penalty for liking something other than your time, which is meaningless if they're doing this with bots and some kind of intelligent filter. The upside is that they might get free
And yet, nothing of value was lost. (Score:3)
For it to have been devalued you'd have to assume it had any value in the first place.
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For it to have been devalued you'd have to assume it had any value in the first place.
No, it can have negative value.
Misleading headline (Score:5, Interesting)
It implies there was value in it in the first place.
Oh, you mean value for advertisers to report to their bosses how well they were doing because so many people 'like' their stuff. Seriously? That's the best metric you assholes have at the moment?
What's not clear from the article is what was in it for the fake or foreign accounts that 'like' things regardless - is this facebook pretending that advertising there works or is this third party likers with am unknown agenda?
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The point is, facebook "likes" are as meaningless as your relationships with most of the people on your "friends" list.
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Strange, I actually socialise with all the people on my friends list, but then it's about 35 people long and consists only of actual friends.
You must be thinking of someone else with your snarky comment.
friend of mine's brother does this (Score:5, Interesting)
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He told me he thinks that 60% of all trends are made up this way by some company like his.
Is his boss named Hubertus Bigend by any chance?
Like devalues itself (Score:5, Insightful)
"Like" has zero value in the absence of "Dislike".
So, how many fake FB accounts do you have? (Score:5, Interesting)
Let's start a random poll.
I have about 15. Only 3 are active outside of my real life account (two different FB games I play as time wasters). The others are alts I used for helping myself when playing games. Thank goodness there are people out there who've created scripts to automate the boring functions of the game.
If you told me I'd get free poker chips or a good weapon or maybe an upgrade for my ovens in Cafe World (yes I'm joking), I'd go like whatever page you wanted me to from as many accounts as need the help. If a bonus item is giftable, that means I'm clicking like 15 times and sending it across to the main account that plays that game.
My more successful alts (of the active ones) are women, they get more random friend requests (so random game items, free clicks when I want help in a game). Games on facebook want you to spam your "friends", so I created fake accounts and use those to spam the randoms who add my account because it has a sexy profile pic instead of hassling my real life account like they want me to.
I'd suggest a large number of people playing Zynga's Mafia Wars are fakes, energy accounts gathering loot to gift across to the main account. Their recent attempts at limiting automation/autoplayers are the reason why game numbers are way down. (They're also making stupid changes in the game and getting rid of real life people, which isn't helping).
I once posted "will cyber for loot" on my status and got a LOT of free stuff sent to me in Mafia Wars. That account has a profile pic that looks a lot like Amber Herd. (I figure I'm an honorary lesbian by borrowing a female persona, so why not.) I didn't follow through on the offer, I didn't need to - no-one even asked, they just sent me a whole bunch of stuff.
The attractive women profiles are handy if I want to find out about someone on facebook, say a real life person and I want to view more detail on their FB account. My real life account is totally disconnected from the fake accounts so I can safely send a friend request to every male in the target person's friends list and at least one will accept every time. This means I end up as a "friend of a friend" any many default security options in facebook allow friends of friends to see stuff that general users can't. Facebook are tightening up a little these days so that is less effective, or at least it was until timeline came in. If you don't manually go and modify your post history, some things are open to anyone.
Lastly - I was playing Zynga poker with one of my alts, got bored and flicked over to my real life FB account (which is game spam free, and recruiter friendly), then saw this posted on the slashdot facebook page in my newsfeed. I think that's irony but Alanis Morissette has me eternally confused about that.
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15 Facebook accounts and going through all that trouble just to play Facebook games or spy on others? I'm really tempted to offer you the "go get laid" - advice.
Many people have difficulty connecting and socializing across an air gap.
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I've easily setup a couple hundred sock puppet accounts. I use iMacros to login/out and perform tasks like clicking like or posting comments. It's useful for getting pages and conversations started and making them appear moderately popular. I do this with a half a dozen other people with a similar number of fake accounts. Total we have more than a 1000 fake accounts between us. I would assume the real number of fake accounts is 40-50%, if not higher.
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Total we have more than a 1000 fake accounts between us.
And this my friends, is just one of the reasons why you'd have to be a total fucking nutjob to own FB. How do you know what the real numbers are?
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Thanks for giving an extended explanation and good concrete examples.
But I would say it's a lot simpler to explain.
Once "Likes" can be traded for something of value, people will begin cheating to that thing of value.
It happens with everything. Pay-per-click spawned meaningless fraudulent clicks, so you can be sure pay-per-like will do the same.
It's just not a lot more complex than that.
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My girlfriend had about 6 fake accounts just to play Pet Society - you got rewarded for every friend you visited. Fortunately she stopped playing this after everything needed to be purchased with real money, and many of those fake accounts were spotted (she didn't do anything to disguise them as real, even the names were ridiculous).
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Every group I join has a different account. Each of my groups of friends has a different account. And a few accounts for free stuff in non-facebook games (eg League of Legends Tristana.)
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> I think that's irony but Alanis Morissette has me eternally
> confused about that.
Ironical---there's a word for that.
way bigger problem (Score:5, Insightful)
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*waits for someone to verbally masturbate over the wisdom of crowds and whatnot*
I think what seems silly to you (and me), seems awesome for people who just don't like to think or make choices. And I fear rather than to appease the higher-maintenance ones, the idea is to marginalize them.
In the end, (a big chunk of) market research is just about finding out what people are thinking, so you can find ways to make them think what you
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Yeah, if people havent realized groups are not seeking and getting what I call "favor likes", then they are clearly in the Mike Gravel Housing Program ("Hiding under a rock!"). Any ranking of pages by likes is inherently skewed, if not completely worthless and useless but to the marketers behind each page.
I also consider asking people to Like a page via a TV commercial one of the least classy things a (big, in particular) company can possibly do. You managed to land a goddamn TV commercial; by doing that
Turnabout is fair play (Score:3)
?huh? (Score:3)
As a sidenote... (Score:3)
Facebook is over (Score:2)
It was over a few years ago. Companies like this just take forever to die. Look at aol. Im sure some grandma in 10 years will still be on facebook, giving the companies corpse a few more bills to buy some crack.
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Facebook will be "over" when a replacement has started to seriously pull away it's users. At the moment this is not happening.
I know there is always a desire to be counter-culture, but the reality is that Facebook is a popular site used by millions (billions?). Many of these people are using it like a virtual public park--you show up, you meet friends, you spread information, tell jokes, share pictures and stories--This is not a new concept of course, it just happens to be that Facebook is doing "best" at
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True, but you must consider what drives facebook. Most people dont post much, they put up a picture and a few comments. Or if they do post a lot, no one is reading. There are few people that generate a lot of interest and discussion, and those are they people most willing to move on, and their audience follows them.
That explains a lot (Score:2)
What i havent seen mentioned (Score:1)
Social signals are bad for search (Score:2)
I've been pointing this out for some time now. See my paper "Social is bad for search, and search is bad for social". [sitetruth.com] As soon as some social signal feeds into search ranking, it gets spammed.
Social spamming is cheaper and easier than classic link farm spamming. Link farms cost money to set up and run. Social spam is hosted for free by Facebook, Google, Yelp. etc. Attempts to stop this have not been successful. Even if 80% of fake accounts are killed off, that just means the spammers have to run more fake
Oh the irony (Score:2)
The bots that create and operate these fake user accounts are probably smarter than the average real facebook user.
Facebook's "Like" has no value, just like "friend" (Score:1)
There are loads of place on the internet where one can buy a "Like", places there one can trade them, and possibly other barter systems.
There are "users" that have 10's of thousands of "friends", these are purely created to promote a company, product, etc.
Much of Facebook is just for ego boosting, both for the users, and for the company. Facebook pretends that there are "125 billion friend connections", and that is a load of crap. Most of those are the "124 billion 'some-one' connections"... because many pe
I'm confused (Score:2)
What value did Facebook's popularity button ever have?
Agung Pratama Sevenfoldism (Score:2)
"Agung Pratama Sevenfoldism, showed his date of birth as 1997 and said he had been a manager at Chevron in 2010."
I'm pretty sure the manager at my local gas station is 13 too... so what's the big deal?