Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok
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“His earlier thought returned to him: probably she was not actually a member of the Thought Police, but then it was precisely the amateur spy who was the greatest danger of all. He did not know how long she had been looking at him, but perhaps for as much as five minutes, and it was possible that his features had not been perfectly under control. It was terribly dangerous to let your thoughts wander when you were in any public place or within range of a telescreen. The smallest thing could give you away. A nervous tic, an “unconscious look of anxiety, a habit of muttering to yourself—anything that carried with it the suggestion of abnormality, of having something to hide. In any case, to wear an improper expression on your face (to look incredulous when a victory was announced, for example) was itself a punishable offense. There was even a word for it in Newspeak: facecrime, it was called.”
Excerpt From 1984
George Orwell -
@Renauda said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
I think the SPCA should remove the cat from that person’s possession.
Wait, did she actually identify as a person?
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Here’s the cat
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@Renauda said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
Looks more like a canid.
Okay. Is this better?
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Tik Tok is very restrictive. Their algorithms are set to capture certain words and zap the video. As a result, people can be having a very PG video - but get zapped. For example, the word "rape" can trigger having a video removed. And as with other social media sites, if someone complains - things can get zapped pretty quickly.
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@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
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@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
@89th said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
Well the first is basically just a TikTok duet, and the reason that works is software. Duets are built in to the app and when you use more app features, you get a more charitable run with your seed group of followers to determine if it'll be shown to a wider audience. (Insta works the same way.)
As to the second thing, it's not always eating, it's anything, really. And that helps diminish the engagement cliff at the 1-2 second mark, which most apps consider a bounce. Talk about thing X while doing completely unrelated thing Y like putting on makeup, making coffee, pulling weeds, etc. For some reason we like that kinda shit. Back when we were growing up, infomercials pulled the same trick. You'd catch up with Wilferd Brimley out on the ranch, brushing down his horse or some such and he'd tell you about diabeetus. Old trick, just used in a slightly different context.
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
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@89th said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
Well the first is basically just a TikTok duet, and the reason that works is software. Duets are built in to the app and when you use more app features, you get a more charitable run with your seed group of followers to determine if it'll be shown to a wider audience. (Insta works the same way.)
As to the second thing, it's not always eating, it's anything, really. And that helps diminish the engagement cliff at the 1-2 second mark, which most apps consider a bounce. Talk about thing X while doing completely unrelated thing Y like putting on makeup, making coffee, pulling weeds, etc. For some reason we like that kinda shit. Back when we were growing up, infomercials pulled the same trick. You'd catch up with Wilferd Brimley out on the ranch, brushing down his horse or some such and he'd tell you about diabeetus. Old trick, just used in a slightly different context.
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
@Aqua-Letifer said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
Do you mean Michigan?
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@89th said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
Well the first is basically just a TikTok duet, and the reason that works is software. Duets are built in to the app and when you use more app features, you get a more charitable run with your seed group of followers to determine if it'll be shown to a wider audience. (Insta works the same way.)
As to the second thing, it's not always eating, it's anything, really. And that helps diminish the engagement cliff at the 1-2 second mark, which most apps consider a bounce. Talk about thing X while doing completely unrelated thing Y like putting on makeup, making coffee, pulling weeds, etc. For some reason we like that kinda shit. Back when we were growing up, infomercials pulled the same trick. You'd catch up with Wilferd Brimley out on the ranch, brushing down his horse or some such and he'd tell you about diabeetus. Old trick, just used in a slightly different context.
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
@Aqua-Letifer said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@89th said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
Well the first is basically just a TikTok duet, and the reason that works is software. Duets are built in to the app and when you use more app features, you get a more charitable run with your seed group of followers to determine if it'll be shown to a wider audience. (Insta works the same way.)
As to the second thing, it's not always eating, it's anything, really. And that helps diminish the engagement cliff at the 1-2 second mark, which most apps consider a bounce. Talk about thing X while doing completely unrelated thing Y like putting on makeup, making coffee, pulling weeds, etc. For some reason we like that kinda shit. Back when we were growing up, infomercials pulled the same trick. You'd catch up with Wilferd Brimley out on the ranch, brushing down his horse or some such and he'd tell you about diabeetus. Old trick, just used in a slightly different context.
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
That is quite interesting. I never really knew how they decided which videos got higher ranked.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@89th said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
Well the first is basically just a TikTok duet, and the reason that works is software. Duets are built in to the app and when you use more app features, you get a more charitable run with your seed group of followers to determine if it'll be shown to a wider audience. (Insta works the same way.)
As to the second thing, it's not always eating, it's anything, really. And that helps diminish the engagement cliff at the 1-2 second mark, which most apps consider a bounce. Talk about thing X while doing completely unrelated thing Y like putting on makeup, making coffee, pulling weeds, etc. For some reason we like that kinda shit. Back when we were growing up, infomercials pulled the same trick. You'd catch up with Wilferd Brimley out on the ranch, brushing down his horse or some such and he'd tell you about diabeetus. Old trick, just used in a slightly different context.
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
That is quite interesting. I never really knew how they decided which videos got higher ranked.
@taiwan_girl said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@89th said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
Well the first is basically just a TikTok duet, and the reason that works is software. Duets are built in to the app and when you use more app features, you get a more charitable run with your seed group of followers to determine if it'll be shown to a wider audience. (Insta works the same way.)
As to the second thing, it's not always eating, it's anything, really. And that helps diminish the engagement cliff at the 1-2 second mark, which most apps consider a bounce. Talk about thing X while doing completely unrelated thing Y like putting on makeup, making coffee, pulling weeds, etc. For some reason we like that kinda shit. Back when we were growing up, infomercials pulled the same trick. You'd catch up with Wilferd Brimley out on the ranch, brushing down his horse or some such and he'd tell you about diabeetus. Old trick, just used in a slightly different context.
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
That is quite interesting. I never really knew how they decided which videos got higher ranked.
It's a shitload more complicated than that—those are just a few details. And there's a ton we know about how the algorithms work but much more we don't. It's a mess.
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@taiwan_girl said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@89th said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
Well the first is basically just a TikTok duet, and the reason that works is software. Duets are built in to the app and when you use more app features, you get a more charitable run with your seed group of followers to determine if it'll be shown to a wider audience. (Insta works the same way.)
As to the second thing, it's not always eating, it's anything, really. And that helps diminish the engagement cliff at the 1-2 second mark, which most apps consider a bounce. Talk about thing X while doing completely unrelated thing Y like putting on makeup, making coffee, pulling weeds, etc. For some reason we like that kinda shit. Back when we were growing up, infomercials pulled the same trick. You'd catch up with Wilferd Brimley out on the ranch, brushing down his horse or some such and he'd tell you about diabeetus. Old trick, just used in a slightly different context.
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
That is quite interesting. I never really knew how they decided which videos got higher ranked.
It's a shitload more complicated than that—those are just a few details. And there's a ton we know about how the algorithms work but much more we don't. It's a mess.
@Aqua-Letifer said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@taiwan_girl said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@89th said in Riley Gaines video removed from TikTok:
@Aqua-Letifer I believe Riley's video uses 2 obviously/common "watch" trends... a person watching another video, and a person eating. Those two things makes people "stop scrolling" to watch the video, I've heard.
Well the first is basically just a TikTok duet, and the reason that works is software. Duets are built in to the app and when you use more app features, you get a more charitable run with your seed group of followers to determine if it'll be shown to a wider audience. (Insta works the same way.)
As to the second thing, it's not always eating, it's anything, really. And that helps diminish the engagement cliff at the 1-2 second mark, which most apps consider a bounce. Talk about thing X while doing completely unrelated thing Y like putting on makeup, making coffee, pulling weeds, etc. For some reason we like that kinda shit. Back when we were growing up, infomercials pulled the same trick. You'd catch up with Wilferd Brimley out on the ranch, brushing down his horse or some such and he'd tell you about diabeetus. Old trick, just used in a slightly different context.
I know way too much about this shit and I kinda wish I didn't. Conversations like these make me want to buy a yurt and move onto BLM land.
That is quite interesting. I never really knew how they decided which videos got higher ranked.
It's a shitload more complicated than that—those are just a few details. And there's a ton we know about how the algorithms work but much more we don't. It's a mess.
I’m pretty sure there’s a multiplier if you actively promote self destructive behavior… Have a good video promoting the importance of patience and dedication? X .05 promotional multiplier. Have a video promoting cutting yourself? X 3000 promotional multiplier!
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G George K referenced this topic on
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Ax, is it genetic or a learned behavior? Was there perhaps a traumatic experience or even a physical blow to the head?