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this post was submitted on 19 Dec 2023
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what I noticed is that posts have huge amounts of upvotes, even from small communities, and often no comments or when it does have comments its often very basic stuff, almost AI like
https://i.imgur.com/rdR0oRZ.png
They aren't even trying with those usernames, lazy.
Yeah, looks like the default "word_wordnumbers" usernames that reddit gives you if don't change them.
I wonder if that would be an easy way to detect botting by not filling in that field for them.
This change is when I knew Reddit was going down the shitter. Automatically handing out default usernames instead of requiring you to pick your own. The only people that could possibly help are a) people with absolutely no imagination whatsoever, b) bots, and c) people making a dozen alts to puff up their main.
Funny enough, this started happening on YouTube (comments) as well, around the same time.
The issue with sites starting to use numbering as part of the default username only started happening after AI posting became a thing, because an Achilles heel is the fact that AI can't come up with enough believable unique names for all the posts they want their AI bots to make.
That seems counterintuitive to me in the context of modern AI approaches. I'm wondering if you could elaborate on that a bit more.
How so? Elaborate?
This seems sufficiently explanatory to me, especially the italicized part...
Unbelievable usernames becomes an easy identifier/tag for identifying bot post.
Edit: since this comment got downvoted (as the assumed reply) I thought I would elaborate a bit more.
Basically, we name our user accounts to fit the society we live in's norms, it's naming conventions.
If you just run a bunch of vowels and consonants together, that does not make a username, at least not one that people will recognize as a valid one created by a human being.
Part of how bots are effective is in the quantity of bots that are used. Since it's near zero cost to spin up a new bot to make posts/comments, many can be made.
However people can track the validity of a user name as being a bot versus human by the quantity of the posts/comments the username makes (only so many hours in a day, and human beings are busy with other things besides just posting on Lemmy), so no one single bot can make too many posts/comments at one time.
Because of this, you need a large quantity of unique names, one for each of your bots, and they have to be believable ones by humans, so they're not identified as bots.
Had no idea they were generating names, joke of a site.
I can't believe 8 people had the exact same idea for a post at the same time, that's crazy
/s
Well, if you're going to defraud investors by pumping up your numbers before your IPO, you might as well go all out.
Is that recent? I haven't used Reddit since a few months and that phenomena was previously only on promoted posts (read, ads)
I think it was there for a while, it's just gone full mask off mode and become particularly noticeable now
like 2 months ago
You know what else is random and probably related to their paid content? Their sorting doesn't work right anymore. Posts in "hot" are regularly like more than a day old but then also some are brand new like minutes old. But if you sort by top 24 hours...same posts. Sometimes the order is different but easily 75% of the posts are the same. A 24 hour old post with no new comments is "hot"? A one hour old post with 20 comments is in the top posts of the past day?...OKAY
It could be incompetence. Lemmy.world has similar and significant issues with sorting as well and I presume you're not also implying that paid content has anything to do with lemmy sorting.
Go back to Reddit astroturfer.