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‘Celebrity' Twitter handles display bot-like behaviour, according to a study that found accounts with more than 10 million followers tend to retweet at a rate similar to automated systems.
Researchers from University of Cambridge in the UK found that in smaller accounts, bots tweet far more than humans. They noted that bot accounts differ from humans in several key ways. However, bot accounts generate more tweets than human accounts. They also retweet far more often, and redirect users to external websites far more frequently than human users.
Bots, like people, can be malicious or benign. The term 'bot' is often associated with spam, offensive content or political infiltration, but many of the most reputable organisations in the world also rely on bots for their social media channels.
For example, major news organisations rely on automation to share the news efficiently. The accounts, while classified as bots, are seen by users as trustworthy sources of information.
To reliably detect bots, researchers manually inspected accounts and determine whether they were bots. This was done using a tool that automatically presented Twitter profiles, and allowed the students to classify the profile and make notes. Each account was collectively reviewed before a final decision was reached.
In order to determine whether an account was a bot, the team looked at different characteristics of each account. These included the account creation date, average tweet frequency, content posted, account description, whether the user replies to tweets, likes or favourites received and the follower to friend ratio.
A total of 3,535 accounts were analysed: 1,525 were classified as bots and 2010 as humans. The bot detection algorithm they subsequently developed achieved roughly 86% accuracy in detecting bots on Twitter.
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