Fake Twitter followers sold online: Popular celebrities caught
At least 55,000 of the fake accounts seemed to rip off the identity of real people, copying the photos, names and bios of other Twitter users.
It has been often said, don't believe everything you hear or see on the internet. And to some extent that statement holds true. In a new revelation, cases of paying for fake Twitter followers has now come to light. What's shocking is that the practice seems to be a rampant among celebrities and even among Twitter executives. The issue was reported by New York Times and the agency has basically identified the group offering such service.

While Social Media companies may be struggling to respond to such issues effectively, New York's Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has now announced a probe into digital marketing company called Devumi that is reportedly selling fake followers to Twitter users. Further, "Impersonation and deception are illegal under New York law. We're opening an investigation into Devumi and its apparent sale of bots using stolen identities," Schneiderman expressed his views on Twitter.
However, he was basically reacting to a New York Times report that claimed Devumi is providing fake followers to social media users. On its website, New York-based Devumi claims to "accelerate your social growth by helping you "quickly gain followers, viewers, likes and more" on Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn and other online platforms "with its blend of marketing tactics".
The NYT report said the company sells fake followers to Twitter users, sometimes using details based on real people. "Devumi sells Twitter followers and retweets to celebrities, businesses and anyone who wants to appear more popular or exert influence online," the report said. "Drawing on an estimated stock of at least 3.5 million automated accounts, each sold many times over, the company has provided customers with more than 200 million Twitter followers," the report claimed.
To understand how Devumi works, the NYT itself set up a new Twitter account and spent $225 on 25,000 followers. "As advertised, the first 10,000 or so looked like real people. They had pictures and full names, hometowns and often authentic-seeming biographies," the report said. "The next 15,000 followers from Devumi were more obviously suspect: no profile pictures, and jumbles of letters, numbers and word fragments instead of names," it added.
A recent research found that between nine and 15 percent of active Twitter accounts are autonomous entities known as social bots. The micro-blogging site has over 300 million monthly active users and that would mean nearly 27 million to 45 million accounts are actually not controlled by humans, according to the study from Indiana University and the University of Southern California in the US.
Meanwhile, Twitter has said that it will look into the matter.


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