- cross-posted to:
- fediverse
- cross-posted to:
- fediverse
This is an update to my previous post about suspicious inactive accounts on a handful of instances: (https://sh.itjust.works/post/998307).
I ended up messaging the admins at the 16 instances show in the attached image. I pointed out their wild user numbers, and referenced the lemmy.ninja post detailing how that instance scrubbed suspicious accounts from their user database.
6 admins responded. They had all noticed the odd accounts and either thought the numbers were wrong, or weren’t sure how to purge the suspicious accounts without nuking their databases. In the end they managed to delete a combined total of about 338k dormant accounts from their instances. (One of the instances seems to have gone down since then.)
I never received a reply from the other 10 instance admins, though 8 of those 10 instances appear to be down (as of 27 July 2023). 2 instances are still up and unchanged.
Between the actively removed accounts and the downed instances, this represents a loss of 930,004 inactive Lemmy accounts!
You can see the drop in the graphs on The Federation. The total number of Lemmy accounts has been cut in half over the past 3 weeks, from a peak of 2.18M to today’s 1.09M. The change is mostly from these 16 instances.
I have to admit, I did not expect such a large change when I started this! Hopefully this bodes well for Lemmy’s future as a place where actual humans interact, rather than a cesspool of automated comments and upvote/downvote brigading.
That’s all I have for now. Keep your stick on the ice; we’re all in this together.
Fantastic work.
Do you think the bot numbers for Reddit will be as bad or worse? Or is there better protection over there?
No major social media site publishes estimates on bot activity, so unless someone is citing a research paper with a reasonable bot-id technique, they’re speculating. That said, there are a few useful things we can say with only modest speculation:
TLDR: This signup wave was so unsophisticated it would never have been possible on a major social site with a security team. But it also didn’t do any altanfible damage, unlike clandestine bot activity on major social sites. Depending on what metrics you use to compare (and how made up your metrics are, since this is all about activity that attempts to stay hidden), either side can come out on top.
I can’t say. I don’t know of a good way to tell an authentic human-driven account from a bot account, either on Lemmy or Reddit. Here on Lemmy we can at least get aggregate user data and point to suspicious trends, which is all I have done. Reddit, on the other hand, is a completely closed box.