Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Why More People Are Sharing Less On Facebook

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Apr, 2015 01:16 PM
    If you have cut down on the amount of content you share on Facebook or Twitter even as your lists of friends and followers grow, you are not alone.
     
    A study co-authored by an Indian-origin researcher suggests that although more and more people are participating in social networking, a smaller percentage of users are actively creating and sharing content.
     
    The study to be published in the journal Management Science pointed out that the cheaper and easier it becomes to reach large numbers of people via social media, the fewer "content creators" choose to participate and the more cluttered the networks become.
     
    “Social communication incentives diminish even as the reach or the span of communication increases,” said study authors Ganesh Iyer and Zsolt Katona from University of California, Berkeley - Haas School of Business. 
     
    Industry reports estimate that just 10 percent of Twitter users broadcast 90 percent of the network's tweets, while only a tiny fraction of the 55 million users who blog post daily, Katona noted.
     
    The relative scarcity of message creators has been noticed before. But what has not been understood are the mechanisms responsible for the imbalance of senders and receivers and the implications for the social networking industry.
     
    The new research suggests that with expansion of the social network, receivers, who once were the recipient of messages from only a few senders, are now targeted by many senders, leading to increased competition for attention. 
     
    And the more distant the receiver, the harder it is for the sender to craft relevant messages, the researchers noted.
     
    As competition grows, some senders decide the payoff is not worth the trouble and drop out, and others decide not to enter the fray, which explains why the proportion of senders to receivers is so low.
     
    It may also explain why some users turn away from popular social networks and are looking for more intimate places to share items with just a handful of people, the researchers noted.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    China Logs on to its First Internet-Themed Museum

    China Logs on to its First Internet-Themed Museum
    China will build its first internet museum to chronicle the development of the net in the increasingly wired country, China's internet network watchdog said Friday.

    China Logs on to its First Internet-Themed Museum

    What? Taller men are smarter too!

    What? Taller men are smarter too!
    The fact is that women fall for men who are taller. Now, they have an extra reason to go for them as researchers have discovered a significant correlation in the DNA between tall people and intelligence.

    What? Taller men are smarter too!

    Revealed: How Earth gets protection from space weather

    Revealed: How Earth gets protection from space weather
    The NASA scientists have discovered how dense particles near earth can send a plume up through space to help protect against incoming solar particles during certain space weather events.

    Revealed: How Earth gets protection from space weather

    Dream about a space trip? Click Here

    Dream about a space trip? Click Here
    Have an extra Rs.1.25 crore in your kitty? You can book a seat on a European plane that would take passengers to over 100 km in the sky -- enabling them to experience how being in space feels.

    Dream about a space trip? Click Here

    A giant leap towards discovering life beyond earth

    A giant leap towards discovering life beyond earth
    In what could be called a game changer in search of life outside our galaxy, astronomers have used a digital camera imaging technology to take a picture of a planet far from our solar system with an earth-based telescope.

    A giant leap towards discovering life beyond earth

    Sugar to Power Smart Phones for 10 days!

    Sugar to Power Smart Phones for 10 days!
    A bio-battery converts sugar into energy - much like our metabolism - decomposing sugar into carbon dioxide and water while releasing electrons.

    Sugar to Power Smart Phones for 10 days!