Twitter Says It Overstated Monthly-User Figures For 3 Years (nytimes.com) 36
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The New York Times (Warning: source may be paywalled; alternative source): Twitter said on Thursday that it had overstated its monthly-user figures since 2014 after mistakenly including data from third-party applications in its counting. The revelation came as the company reported that its net loss had narrowed in the third quarter and that its number of daily active users had risen 14 percent. The company said it had discovered that its measure of monthly active users had been improperly including figures from third-party applications that used Digits, a software-development program. Digits is part of the Fabric mobile application platform that Twitter sold to Alphabet, Google's parent company, this year. Digits allowed third-party applications to send authentication messages through Twitter's systems and did not reflect activity on the Twitter platform, the company said. As a result, the company lowered the number of monthly active users by two million for the first and second quarters of this year and by one million for the fourth quarter of 2016. Twitter said its data-retention policies made it unable to reconcile the figures for periods before last year's fourth quarter.
IPO (Score:5, Insightful)
So, stats were overstated around the time they had their IPO.
Re: (Score:2)
You mean, "So, stats were overstated around the time they had their IPO. Sad!"
The First Desktop Publishing Software Was... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3)
*cough* *cough* (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Three years? (Score:2)
No, Twitter's been overrated for far longer than that...
Not very surprised (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
when did the stature of limitations run out on lying on the ipo?
When Trump became President and the SEC became toothless.
It is still private, right? (Score:2)
If they used the sky high valuations created by these faked numbers and sell out to any publicly traded company, then we should chase these owners and throw them in jail.
The limited liability corporation idea has run amok. Now the courts are giving private corporations rights of real citizens, like freedom of speech, spending money = speech, religious beliefs etc, it is high time we reverse the trend and throw a few bastards in jail to reign them in.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Shocked! (Score:2)
/cynical I'm shocked, shocked I tell you, that yet-another-corporation lied about their stats.
Users or Accounts? (Score:2)
And their stock went up 20%? (Score:1)
Potential liabilities? (Score:2)
Still, it makes their claim of a 14% growth in active users pretty suspicious...
Fake activity (Score:2)
I tried out Twitter for a while and have tried other platforms as like Instagram etc.
It seems to me that most of what happens on platforms like this are that when you post something, they get some "likes" that comes from accounts that use automated systems that trigger on keywords releated to what they are trying to sell/get them famous. It happened with every post.