{"source":{"name":"The Evidence Hub - on the regulation of digital services","url":"https:\/\/evidencehub.net","license":"Creative Common CC-BY 4.0 International"},"data":[{"data":[0.35,0.7,0.82,0.93,1,1,1],"name":"All suspended accounts"},{"data":[0.05,0.12,0.36,0.8,1,1,1],"name":"ISIS accounts"}],"_data":[["Number of tweets before suspension","All suspended accounts","ISIS accounts"],["1","0.35","0.05"],["10","0.7","0.12"],["100","0.82","0.36"],["1000","0.93","0.8"],["10000","1","1"],["100000","1","1"],["1000000","1","1"]],"labels":{"name":"Number of tweets before suspension","values":["1","10","100","1000","10000","100000","1000000"]},"metadata":{"link":"https:\/\/snap.stanford.edu\/mis2\/files\/MIS2_paper_23.pdf","type":"Problem","unit":"Share of suspended users","year":"2015","title":"ISIS Accounts Spread More Content Before Getting Suspended by Twitter Compared With Other Eventually Suspended Accounts","topic":"Incitement to Terrorism","method":"Data mining","source":"Alfifi, Majid, Parisa Kaghazgaran and James Caverlee. \"Measuring the Impact of ISIS Social Media Strategy, \" Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Texas A&M University, 2015","sub_topic":"Prevalence of incitement to terrorism","chart_number":"47","geographical":"Global"},"description":"This graph shows the percentage of suspended users who were able to tweet 10, 100, 1,000, or more times before being suspended. Based on data collected from Twitter, this chart shows that ISIS accounts seem to successfully tweet more posts before being suspended, compared to the entire population of suspended accounts."}