Social networks drive illusions
The majority illusion [in social networks] can
be used to trick the population into believing something that is not
true.
That’s interesting work that immediately explains a number of
interesting phenomena. For a start, it shows how some content can spread
globally while other similar content does not—the key is to start with a
small number of well-connected early adopters fooling the rest of the
network into thinking it is common.
That might seem harmless when it comes to memes on Reddit or videos
on YouTube. But it can have more insidious effects too. “Under some
conditions, even a minority opinion can appear to be extremely popular
locally,” say Lerman and co. That might explain how extreme views can
sometimes spread so easily.
It might also explain the spread of antisocial behavior.
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