Anonymous ID: b0e2a3 Jan. 21, 2021, 10:56 a.m. No.12653300   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3705 >>3860

Has anybody seen this?

https://voterfraud2020.io/

VoterFraud2020

We are making publicly available VoterFraud2020, a multi-modal Twitter dataset with 7.6M tweets and 25.6M retweets from 2.6M users that includes key phrases and hashtags related to voter fraud claims between October 23rd and December 16th. The dataset also includes the full set of links and YouTube videos shared in these tweets, with data about their spread in different Twitter sub-communities. Key takeaways from our initial analysis of the data are listed below.

Key Takeaways

-Community detection analysis on the dataset reveals five main sub-communities involved in the discussion: four communities that appear to promote claims of voter fraud ("promoters") and one community of "detractors" (colored blue in Figure 1 on this page).

-Preliminary analyses show that Twitter’s suspensions mostly affected a specific sub-community within the cluster of voter fraud claim promoters (suspended users are orange in Figure 2, mostly overlapping with the yellow sub-community in Figure 1).

-Initial analysis found 34,938 users in the data who used QAnon-related hashtags in their tweets or profile descriptions. Of these users, 64% were suspended. There is strong evidence that Twitter’s suspensions focused on the QAnon community. We found that 79% of these “QAnon users” for whom we had network data were part of the "yellow" sub-community where suspension rates were highest (Figure 1). The rate of QAnon hashtags in the yellow sub-community was 6 to 90 times higher than other sub-communities in that graph.

-Many of the top YouTube videos shared by promoters of voter fraud claims are still available on YouTube as on January 18th, 2021; all the top ten videos shared by the promoter communities were still available on YouTube on January 10th. Explore the list on this page.

-Additional information about the data and analysis is available in the paper.

Pretty sure they are violating the Twitter Developer Terms although they claim to not. My 'Key Takeaway' is that we need to get some fancy college students to take up some studies on THEM. Anything goes as long as it's for the greater academic good.