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Social Clicks: What and Who Gets Read on Twitter?

Published: 14 June 2016 Publication History

Abstract

Online news domains increasingly rely on social media to drive traffic to their websites. Yet we know surprisingly little about how a social media conversation mentioning an online article actually generates clicks. Sharing behaviors, in contrast, have been fully or partially available and scrutinized over the years. While this has led to multiple assumptions on the diffusion of information, each assumption was designed or validated while ignoring actual clicks. We present a large scale, unbiased study of social clicks---that is also the first data of its kind---gathering a month of web visits to online resources that are located in 5 leading news domains and that are mentioned in the third largest social media by web referral (Twitter). Our dataset amounts to 2.8 million shares, together responsible for 75 billion potential views on this social media, and 9.6 million actual clicks to 59,088 unique resources. We design a reproducible methodology and carefully correct its biases. As we prove, properties of clicks impact multiple aspects of information diffusion, all previously unknown:(i) Secondary resources, that are not promoted through headlines and are responsible for the long tail of content popularity, generate more clicks both in absolute and relative terms; (ii) Social media attention is actually long-lived, in contrast with temporal evolution estimated from shares or receptions; (iii) The actual influence of an intermediary or a resource is poorly predicted by their share count, but we show how that prediction can be made more precise.

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    Published In

    cover image ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review
    ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review  Volume 44, Issue 1
    Performance evaluation review
    June 2016
    409 pages
    ISSN:0163-5999
    DOI:10.1145/2964791
    Issue’s Table of Contents
    • cover image ACM Conferences
      SIGMETRICS '16: Proceedings of the 2016 ACM SIGMETRICS International Conference on Measurement and Modeling of Computer Science
      June 2016
      434 pages
      ISBN:9781450342667
      DOI:10.1145/2896377
    Publication rights licensed to ACM. ACM acknowledges that this contribution was authored or co-authored by an employee, contractor or affiliate of a national government. As such, the Government retains a nonexclusive, royalty-free right to publish or reproduce this article, or to allow others to do so, for Government purposes only.

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    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 14 June 2016
    Published in SIGMETRICS Volume 44, Issue 1

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    Author Tags

    1. news media
    2. social clicks
    3. social networks
    4. twitter

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    • (2024)Czy adwersarze uczą się na własnych błędach? Ewolucja nagłówków fake newsPolskie szkoły lingwistyki stosowanej. Jubileusz 50-lecia Instytutu Lingwistyki Stosowanej Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego10.31338/uw.9788323562542.pp.95-118Online publication date: 2024
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