If you’re paywalled, check this archive link.

What the article calls “corporate trolls” is simply astroturfing. It became rampant in Reddit; as the walled garden was unwalled, more of the organic grass has been replaced.

  • @Lojcs@lemm.ee
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    304 months ago

    The studies are from 2018 and 2020 and they didn’t find that 15% of the content was by corporate trolls, they found that 15% of the top 100 subreddits had posts by corporate trolls in them. 🙄

  • @eatthecake@lemmy.world
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    134 months ago

    Author is making things up. The studies it talks about are not new, they do not link to the studies and there is no evidence that 15% of reddit content is corporate trolls. The author claims that young people reporting more troll activity is evidence of trolls targeting younger people rather than evidence of young people being more likely to identify troll activity. Article is garbage.

  • This study is from 2020, but if they did the kind of approach I suspect they did, they’d just have to re-run the algorithm against later data. I don’t know what they’re doing about API requests for academics (hopefully they just grant access), but that aside it shouldn’t be too hard.

    Unfortunately the linked article doesn’t link the paper (that I saw), and what they seem to think was the title of the paper is the title of a journal (which the paper probably appeared in, but I’m not going to do that kind of search on my phone).