note: since we updated the way we collect and track users, these numbers are not 100% accurate but they are still interesting nonetheless. Just take them with a grain of salt.

It all started Friday morning with this listicle from Mashable:

50 Websites to Waste Your Time On

This brought in 1228 users in the first 12 hours and 2887 total. Not too interesting. Makes sense. What is interesting is what happened next! It's the phenomenon sometimes referred to as "blogspam". Mashable posts a listicle and it gets reposted EVERYWHERE.

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Next up was:

TECMUNDO - Portuguese --- 50 websites para você passar o dia todo navegando --- 4446 hits

Voz Forums - Vietnamese ----50 websites giết thời gian cho anh em --- 586 hits

Engenharia e - Portuguese --- 50 sites para você perder seu tempo ---- 320 hits

etohum - Turkish ---- 10 Eğitsel Internet Adresi --- 68 hits

Fakulteti.mk - Macedonian --- СТРАНИЦИ ЗА ТРОШЕЊЕ ВРЕМЕ --- 59 hits

Lojiloji - Turkish ---- Zaman Öldürmelik 50 Websitesi ---- 16 hits

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Overall Stats of Referred Users:

    8,888 referred users from May 2nd - May 8th.

    19,764 actions by those users

    Average Actions per visit: 2.22 --- (direct entry users: 8.15 actions)

    Average time on site: 5min 19sec --- (direct entry users: 13min55sec)

    Bounce rate: 67.3% --- (direct entry users: 35.38%)

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Two interesting notes:

1. Each site had no problem copying the text word for word. Some even kept the same fonts, etc. But each pulled new pictures.

2. I sincerely doubt that Tecmundo actually brought in more traffic than Mashable. This may have to do with the demographics of users on Tecmundo vs Mashable. I'm guessing those on Mashable are far more likely to be using a new computer with a new browsers and having "Do Not Track" turned on (by default or by choice).

Questions:

1. Is Mashable affiliated with these other sites in any ways?

2. Does the same thing work in reverse? Will Tecmundo write a piece and Mashable will repackage it in English? Just how does this giant recycling media machine work?

Taking a page from lil's book, I would like to ask, "What can be learned?”

1. I learned how prevalent this type of blatant reposting occurs online. It's a really interesting journey through how content is generated online. This is one article that were tracking through referrer links. If this same thing happens to every blog everywhere…wow!

2. This makes me think of an old comment from reddit regarding blogspam:

3. I also learned that English blogs are far less likely to post a copied Mashable article, but any other country totally will.

4. I also learned that influxes of users from blogs / news articles are seem to be far less disruptive that influxes from reddit.

So, Hubski. What do you think of this? What do you make of it? Interesting? Hopeless? Amazing? Surprising?

ButterflyEffect:

I wonder if the person who wrote the Mashable "Listicle" has an account here.

Regarding learning point 4, I think that people coming over from a hijacked article are likely to be doing so for more innocent reasons than some of the people who have came here from Reddit under the premise of "I want Reddit but not really Reddit", or "my freedom of speech!!!". Either way, I've been enjoying a lot of the new folks.


posted 3638 days ago