TikTok's recommendations algorithm is naughty american sex videosending users down a far right wing rabbit hole
QAnon. Patriot Party, Oath Keepers. Three Percenters. Videos promoting these far right wing movements are all banned on TikTok. Yet the viral app's recommendations algorithm keeps pushing accounts that promote these groups and movements anyway.
According to a new report by the media monitoring group Media Matters for America, TikTok's user recommendation algorithm is pushing its users toward accounts with the kinds of far-right views that are supposedly prohibited on the platform.
The report found that TikTok is still promoting content from QAnon, Patriot Party, Oath Keepers, and Three Percentersaccounts on the platform's "For You" page. The For You page is where TikTok's algorithm sends content it believes each specific user would like.
Furthermore, after recommending this far-right content to a user, TikTok's algorithm "increasingly serves" that user with other far-right TikTok accounts to follow. This type of behavior from social media algorithms often sends users spiraling down a "rabbit hole" of increasingly further right, extremist content.
The issue uncovered by Media Matters is so common that the organization was able to identify six different specific patterns in which TikTok would funnel users toward accounts related to these groups — the conspiratorial QAnon movement, the far-right Patriot Party, and the militias: Oath Keepers and Three Percenters. All four of these groups played a role in the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol, which attempted to disrupt the final set of Congressional proceedings that sealed President Joe Biden's (unquestionably legitimate) 2020 election win. Five people died as a result of the riot in Washington, D.C. that day.
This isn't the first time radicalization via TikTok has been uncovered either. Another recent report foundthat far-right content was so pervasive on the app that entire far-right influencer communities are growing there.
TikTok's user recommendation algorithm suggests which accounts a user should follow based on who they're already following and what they're watching on the platform. Many other social media platforms, like YouTubeand Facebook, have similar recommendation algorithms and have had the same types of issues with them as well.
SEE ALSO: TikTok will soon force personalized ads on its usersAnd like many social platforms, TikTok has struggledwith problematic far-right content and misinformation. The company took several steps in early 2020 to address an onslaught of falsehoods concerning the COVID-19 pandemic. TikTok also made attempts to confront the growing extremism on its platform. For example, the company prohibitedcontent related to the far-right conspiracy theory QAnon.
The fact that it's TikTok is what makes this case especially concerning. The app's recommendation algorithms are widely regarded as the platform's "secret sauce." TikTok is known for offering its users hyper-targetedsuggestions. The algorithm is incredibly good at finding exactly what it thinks would keep a user watching videos on the app, even if said user doesn't know what they want themselves.
Mashable has reached out to TikTok and will update this post when we hear back.
UPDATE: March 29, 2021, 9:14 a.m. EDT TikTok provided the following statement in an email the Mashable:
"TikTok works aggressively to stop the spread of disinformation and violence, and we prohibit the promotion of QAnon and extremist groups including Three Percenters, Patriot Party, and Oath Keepers. We also redirect related searches and hashtags to our Community Guidelines to make this content harder to find."
In addition, the accounts mentioned in the Media Matters report have been removed from the platform.
Previous:Bestway Hydro
Apple Pencil 3 is near, according to rumors — 3 new features we're expectingGlen Baxter Week, Day Five: Porn Collections, YodelersFalling for FitzgeraldTitle Fights: Who Gets to Name an Author’s Book?Daniel Spoerri’s FleaCNBC segment goes off the rails with barking dogs, man in underwearFrom Gods to Guns: How Our Stories of War Have ChangedIt’s Disability Pride Month. So why is nobody talking about it?Trollope’s “Doctor Thorne”: Read It, Don’t Watch ItP&G home essentials Amazon deal: Spend $100 and get a $25 CreditTaxicab Confessions: Sure, I’d Kidnap a Celebrity!Wordle today: The answer and hints for October 17Air fryer steak and veggie skewers are the easiest kebabs you'll ever makeIs Instagram bringing back its Reels Play bonus for creators?Translating Adonis’s “Elegy for the Times”Vivienne Westwood’s Son Will Burn $7.1 Million in Punk MemorabiliaThe Joys of Eating a Hot Dog Standing up at the AirportWhen T. S. Eliot Rejected “Animal Farm”Sweet Sorrow, et ceteraWhat's the story behind the Instagram 'Little Miss' meme? Olivia Rodrigo's Casetify collab embraces vintage tech nostalgia Punks Behind the Iron Curtain Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for September 18 How Gordon Lish Antipicated “The Jinx” A Letter from Ernest Hemingway: “Liquor is my best friend” “Mating” Book Club, Part 2: Of Tits and Nubs Be Dangerous: Robert Frost on “Meet the Press” Best iPad Pro deal: Get the 6th generation iPad Pro for $100 off 11 creative ways to use a water bottle instead of recycling it There’s an Erotic Animated Don Quixote, and It’s Terrifying How to (Hypothetically) Smuggle a Cheese Ball Through Airport Security “Mating” Book Club, Part 1: Chasing Waterfalls “Mating” Book Club, Part 3: Party Life in Botswana The academia aesthetic and its many subgenres, explained How Do You Make Art Last Forever? Staff Picks: Rage, Reggae, Reading Rooms by The Paris Review Fitness trackers for dogs are irresistible to data Amazon's second Prime Day announced for October— here's what we know Strife in the Fast Lane 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for September 18, 2023
1.5403s , 10519.453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【naughty american sex video】,Creation Information Network