Fake it till you make it – a take on fake users

Wow. I can honestly say I've never used fake accounts on my forum. It didn't even occur to me to create fake accounts to appear to have more members. I don't have that kind of time! LOL! I'm busy enough just being me on the forum.

My forum is 2 years and 7 months old. And as of this moment...

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That works out to just over 2000 messages posted per month.

In the realm of forums, it's still very much small potatoes. But it's growing organically.
Yeah but how many of those 2,243 users are spammers, trolls, scammers, etc?

At least i have 7 actual users.
 
Yeah but how many of those 2,243 users are spammers, trolls, scammers, etc?

At least i have 7 actual users.
62,000 actual posts / comments... authentic content.

I have many actual very active members. We haven't had any problems with spammers / scammers. Honestly. Maybe because I limit membership to the USA only. For no other reason than I am not willing to comply with the laws (such as the EU's GDPR) of other countries.
 
For no other reason than I am not willing to comply with the laws (such as the EU's GDPR) of other countries
I'm not an expert, but if your forum isn't hosted in the EU, I believe you're not required to comply with GDPR, even if you have EU members. If I travel to the USA I fall under American law even if I am French.

Or do I misunderstand this?
 
I'm not an expert, but if your forum isn't hosted in the EU, I believe you're not required to comply with GDPR, even if you have EU members.
Nope. My understanding is that if your site / forum SERVES any country in the EU (if you target or have EU clients or users), you are liable for not following their laws. If people in the EU use my site / forum by joining, which is to input personal information, data, or content.... then I (as the owner) am subject to the laws in the EU. So, I've used the Geoblock Registrations add-on to prevent registrations from anywhere but the USA.

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As others have said, the biggest and most successful sites all used multiple accounts to help them "make it". I noticed that the people who are against it have forums with 5 or 10 members. They're not in business, they're just a hobbyist of some kind.

Those of us who have to make money know that a few puppet accounts saying real things and providing real content isn't going to hurt anything. It's going to help.

I've completely ditched forums that had no activity before, why should I waste my time there? You post something and nobody ever responds, I'm not sure why they're still paying the rent on the place.

What metric are you using for a successful community? Because the majority of sites (outside of Reddit/Facebook, which are social media that were established at a time they had little competition) who use fake activity generally do not become big successful communities.

The reason fake users or fake activity is noticeable is for the same reason you ditch inactive communities; people notice that the statistic of number of users or previous activity does not match up to the current activity. If you use fake users to initially seed your community, it is fairly obvious when there is an activity drop when you stop using those users.

Not going to go into specifics of the communities I own or manage, but most of them are businesses or business-adjacent (community is not the business). The smallest of which in activity and users is also one of the more successful money wise 🤷‍♂️, and that is still 50k verified unique users. I have never once used fake activity, AI or paid posters (y).

I'm not an expert, but if your forum isn't hosted in the EU, I believe you're not required to comply with GDPR, even if you have EU members. If I travel to the USA I fall under American law even if I am French.

Or do I misunderstand this?

You're still protected by GDPR if you're travelling outside of the UK.
 
The reason fake users or fake activity is noticeable is for the same reason you ditch inactive communities; people notice that the statistic of number of users or previous activity does not match up to the current activity
Unless you're using a script to measure this, this is impossible to read, especially for boards that are 20 years old. There's no way to tell, because some members have even died in that time (I've only seen it on one forum where the member was there the entire time till their death).
If you use fake users to initially seed your community, it is fairly obvious when there is an activity drop when you stop using those users.
Unless the real users mix in with the fake and the pendulum swings to where it's legitimate users. But then, I revert back to my first statement that real users will always come and go. There's literally no way to measure this accurately. You are just eyeballing it, and probably better at it being a forum admin than the average user.
 
Unless you're using a script to measure this, this is impossible to read, especially for boards that are 20 years old. There's no way to tell, because some members have even died in that time (I've only seen it on one forum where the member was there the entire time till their death).

Unless the real users mix in with the fake and the pendulum swings to where it's legitimate users. But then, I revert back to my first statement that real users will always come and go. There's literally no way to measure this accurately. You are just eyeballing it, and probably better at it being a forum admin than the average user.

Your initial user base generally makes up the core of your community, at least unless there is a falling out. When those users disappear there are usually questions, whether or not people were there at the time or if they come by later and run across old content. If you have 21 active users at the start of your community, and only 1-5 of those users are active a year or two later... There are generally questions.

Also, unless it is AI, or paid posts, it is fairly easy to tell when the same person is sockpuppeting by the way they write, or different mannerisms. Not everyone will pick up on it consciously, but over time people do pick up on it sub consciously because your brain likes to recognize patterns.

I also don't call out communities for fake activity; the examples I am thinking of are specifically when other people have brought it up, and normally there has been backlash for it. People do not like being fooled, and that is exactly what fake activity is.

Whether you agree or not, I don't really care as it's your community, and not mine. Whatever choices or mistakes people choose to make is theirs, I'm just posting so that people who are just getting into this hobby/business/idiotic mistake do not take bad advice (y). If you have to use fake activity/AI posts/paid posts to gain activity in your community... You probably do not have much of a reason to be running a community at the end of the day, especially when even having a small friends group is usually enough to get started.
 
We often have a service (one I’m planning to have again soon) where community owners can purchase genuine content, paid posts from our team to their community. It works well, and it’s in high demand. It sparks activity and engagement on their community.

If you have the right people then it’s something to consider when your community is low on activity. Being a good community leader is also proactively searching for opportunities and engagements. Not your thing? Okay that’s your right - if you only want to do it organically, that’s fine. But those who do use such service from paid posters have never complained and there is usually a 99% return who request again.

Do what you want, it’s your community. No one should judge. A few paid posters isn’t going to ruin your community and make people run away. It’s more obvious when you as an admin have multiple fake accounts with “different” personalities. But again, it’s your community. If you’re happy with 7 users, that’s cool.
 
We often have a service (one I’m planning to have again soon) where community owners can purchase genuine content, paid posts from our team to their community. It works well, and it’s in high demand. It sparks activity and engagement on their community.

If you have the right people then it’s something to consider when your community is low on activity. Being a good community leader is also proactively searching for opportunities and engagements. Not your thing? Okay that’s your right - if you only want to do it organically, that’s fine. But those who do use such service from paid posters have never complained and there is usually a 99% return who request again.

Do what you want, it’s your community. No one should judge. A few paid posters isn’t going to ruin your community and make people run away. It’s more obvious when you as an admin have multiple fake accounts with “different” personalities. But again, it’s your community. If you’re happy with 7 users, that’s cool.
Well said
Simon Cowell Wow GIF by America's Got Talent
 
by the way they write, or different mannerisms.
AI changed everything. You can run your writing through a custom GPT and tell it to make common spelling mistakes, change the tone, change the dialect (southern to British English), use different synonyms, etc. and you would never know anymore.

Before AI, sure, you could tell. But, you can't tell anymore, only have a hunch.
Whether you agree or not, I don't really care as it's your community, and not mine.
I was just pointing out that you wouldn't be able to tell. Even by your response of 21 to 5 users, you're still guessing. That's the best you can really do.
 
Nope. My understanding is that if you SERVE any country in the EU (if you target or have EU clients or users), you are liable for not following their laws.
Thanks, i learnt something.
Since the UK has left the EU, you might consider opening registration for UK citizens. Unless UK citizens are still protected by GDPR regulations?

You're still protected by GDPR if you're travelling outside of the UK.
Of course, but if it's allowed to eat cat in France you can't eat cat in US.
 
Of course, but if it's allowed to eat cat in France you can't eat cat in US.
Probably not the best analogy right now... 🤣

(Don't Google our political news or anything...)

But I did learn something from this.

GDPR protects the personal data and the rights of data subjects as long as they are EU citizens, no matter where they are living. GDPR Article 3 explains that any company in the world that employs or does business with EU citizens must comply with GDPR regulations.

I thought as long as they were outside of the EU, physically, that it wouldn't apply. And, by physically, that could be by use of a VPN as you would physically appear outside of the EU to the host. You mean to tell me that if a EU citizen tricks a website into believing they are not a EU citizen by using a VPN, they could still turn around and pull the EU citizen card with GDRP complaints?
 
Nope. My understanding is that if you SERVE any country in the EU (if you target or have EU clients or users), you are liable for not following their laws.

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Who is going to enforce EU laws in the US?
 
If you have to use fake activity/AI posts/paid posts to gain activity in your community... You probably do not have much of a reason to be running a community at the end of the day, especially when even having a small friends group is usually enough to get started.
^^^Agree.^^^

AI changed everything. You can run your writing through a custom GPT and tell it to make common spelling mistakes, change the tone, change the dialect (southern to British English), use different synonyms, etc. and you would never know anymore.
Ha! I can see so-called "AI" content a mile away. Seriously. Whether it's images, video, or text... it's super-obvious to me.

Thanks, i learnt something.
Since the UK has left the EU, you might consider opening registration for UK citizens. Unless UK citizens are still protected by GDPR regulations?
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It's just not worth it to me to try to keep up with the laws of other countries. *'em. And as an American, I highly value my American Freedoms and Rights. I will not be subject to their onerous laws. We've got enough of our own! LOL! So.... yeah... *'em.
 
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You mean to tell me that if a EU citizen tricks a website into believing they are not a EU citizen by using a VPN, they could still turn around and pull the EU citizen card with GDRP complaints?
VPNs can be used for a variety of reasons and not necessarily "tricking" - I doubt it would stop a citizen of the EU asserting their rights if they wanted to.
Just a hypothetical, but if they don't, couldn't someone take it to the courts to have the website blocked from the EU if they don't?
No doubt that seems possible. But if you disagree with wanting to comply with a states legislation, may be best to not have your site visible in those countries anyway.
I will not be subject to their onerous laws. So.... yeah... *'em.
I haven't found anything onerous about the laws. It's mainly about privacy, legislation around copyright infringement and hate speech.

The privacy stuff is mostly just common courtesy, ie not broadcasting personal info someone trusts you not to make public. And don't some US states have similar privacy laws?

I think there's also stuff about copyright and hate speech of course.

Yeah, i saw that migrants eats cat in Springfield... That's disgusting!

OT alert!

Fun fact: some Spanish restaurants serve rabbit with the head still on so customers can tell it isn’t cat.
 
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