Clickbait

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examples of clickbait headlines

Clickbait refers to web content designed to entice its readers into clicking an accompanying link. It frequently occurs in journalism and social media sites in the form of short teaser messages [1] designed to attract attention. Clickbait commonly encourages to click on a link by withholding information about the article it links to. Often the landing pages of such links are composed of [[[Fake News | fake news]]] or opinion pieces without supporting research or evidence.[2][3] Online news media outlets rely heavily on page views to generate ad revenue and use clickbaits to increase the amount of people that visit their page. [4][5] Mainstream usage of clickbait has been criticized for misleading users and lowering quality standards in journalism.

History

Clickbait headline taken from CNN's Twitter feed
Clickbait in early 19th century.[1]

Prior to the term clickbait being used, sensationalist headlines were used to amass an audience as early as the 19th century, where political cartoons were displayed to attract the attention of the readers. Similar tactics were also present in early 19th century journalism where provocative newspaper headlines competed for attention. [6] The emergence of clickbait in tabloid journalism [4] as well as its success in rousing interest have put pressure on legacy media due to competition for readers and revenue.[7] Many research studies have been conducted to understand the psychological appeal of clickbait, leading to empirical methods for identifying it.

Backlash

Facebook

In response to the spread of clickbait, Facebook has made efforts to improve news feed algorithms to "help people find the posts and links from publishers that are most interesting and relevant, and to continue to weed out stories that people frequently tell us are spammy and that they don’t want to see".[2] Facebook has attempted to remove clickbait by measuring the click-to-share ratio of links[4], identifying phrases that are commonly used in clickbait headlines,[8] [9] and identifying clickbait by measuring the amount of time that the user spend on the website after clicking the link. [2] Other scholars have also developed clickbait detection models and extensions to further help decrease how often they appear[1][4] as well as developing tools for analyzing news sources in order to distinguish real and fake news. [10]

YouTube

In order to combat clickbait thumbnails and video titles, YouTube has incentivized content creators to accumulate watch time rather than views. An editor from DIY Musician explains that, "Because YouTube view counts can be so easily gamed by misleading thumbnails... YouTube now measures the total amount of time a viewer watches your video (and any videos they watch after your video)." [11]


Types

Exaggeration

Title exaggerating the content on the landing page.

Example:   Cringeworthy tattoos that will destroy your faith in humanity


Teasing

Omission of details from title to build suspense: teasing.

Example:   “Here’s Why Hillary Clinton Is ‘Deeply Worried’ About The UN’s Damning Climate Report”


Inflammatory

Either phrasing or use of inappropriate/vulgar words.

Example:   Putin Punched at G20 Summit.


Formatting

Overuse of capitalization/punctuation, particularly ALL CAPS or exclamation points.

Example:   EXCLUSIVE: Top-Secret Method allowed a mother to break the world record: 12kg in 4 weeks!


Graphic

Subject matter that is salacious or disturbing or unbelievable.

Example:   Donatella Versace plastic surgery overload: Waxy face re-sembles melting candle.


Bait-and-switch

The thing promised/implied from the title is not on the landing page: it requires additional clicks or just missing.

Example:   Beers Americans No Longer Drink.


Ambiguous

Title unclear or confusing to spur curiosity.

Example:   Hands on: Samsung’s iPhone 5 is absolutely beautiful.


Wrong

Just plain incorrect article: factually wrong.

Example:   Scientist Confesses: “Global Warming a $22 Billion Scam/center"


Ethical concerns

Clickbait headlines typically aim to "exploit a “curiosity gap” by providing just enough information to make a reader curious, but not enough to satisfy that curiosity".[12][13] The headlines are aimed at altering the emotions of the user, and if they fall for a clickbait it often leads to negative experiences. The presence of clickbaits in social media are also creating an increase in fake news where large proportions of social media users are uneducated on how to distinguish fake news sources from genuine news sources, which in turn create filter bubbles of misinformed users.

Negative experiences

Negative experiences are created when the user encounters a clickbait and has high expectations than what the article contains.[14][15]. Clickbaits rely on emotions to attract viewers and often create headlines that cause anger, anxiety, humor, excitement, inspiration, or surprise.[16] Upon visiting the article, many people are disappointed because they are often grammatically incorrect and the content found inside does not correspond to the title. Clickbaits can also lead to frustration because of their rate of occurrence on news feeds.

Fake news and misinformed users

Main article: Fake News

People are now using social media as their only way of acquiring news and many people do not know how to adequately identify genuine news sources [17] making them vulnerable to believing clickbaits when they encounter one. Clickbait often take bits of true stories but insinuate and make up other details to make the users react to them and their success is due to the large amounts of views and shares they receive. Clickbait are hard often hard to distinguish from real news sources because their format is manipulated to resemble credible journalism. Clickbait are notorious for spreading misinformation[18] and if users believe the content of the clickbait chances are they are going to share it with their own network. This further popularizes the clickbait and presents it to a larger number of users who could do the same, creating filter bubbles of misinformed users [19] who are often not educated on how to distinguish fake from real news sources.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Potthast, Martin; Köpsel, Sebatian; Stein, Benno; Hagen, Matthias (2016). ClickBait Detection Bauhaus-Universität Weimer
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 The Washington Post website: "What is ‘click bait’ and why Facebook wants to display less of it" https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/technology/wp/2014/08/26/what-is-click-bait-and-why-facebook-wants-to-display-less-of-it/?utm_term=.eccfff2e28b8
  3. Tech Crunch: "*** is a clickbait "https://techcrunch.com/2016/09/25/wtf-is-clickbait/"
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Chakraborty, Abhijnan; Paranjape, Bhargavi; Kakarla, Sourya; Ganguly, Niloy (2016). Stop Clickbait: Detecting and Preventing Clickbaits in Online News Media Cornell University Library
  5. The dirty secrets of clickbait. This post will blow your mind! "https://econsultancy.com/blog/64399-the-dirty-secrets-of-clickbait-this-post-will-blow-your-mind/"
  6. A History of Clickbait: The First 100 Years http://io9.gizmodo.com/a-history-of-clickbait-the-first-100-years-1530683235
  7. PBS website: "Column: Why click-bait will be the death of journalism" http://www.pbs.org/newshour/making-sense/what-you-dont-know-about-click-bait-journalism-could-kill-you
  8. Facebook newsroom website: "News Feed FYI: Further Reducing Clickbait in Feed"http://newsroom.fb.com/news/2016/08/news-feed-fyi-further-reducing-clickbait-in-feed/
  9. engadget: "Facebook is ramping up its fight against clickbait"https://www.engadget.com/2016/08/04/facebook-is-ramping-up-its-fight-against-clickbait/
  10. "False, Misleading, Clickbait-y, and Satirical “News” Sources" https://d279m997dpfwgl.cloudfront.net/wp/2016/11/Resource-False-Misleading-Clickbait-y-and-Satirical-%E2%80%9CNews%E2%80%9D-Sources-1.pdf
  11. The importance of watch time and subscribers to your YouTube Channel. DIY Musician. Jun 23, 2015. Web. Apr 7, 2017. http://diymusician.cdbaby.com/youtube/the-importance-of-watch-time-and-subscribers-to-your-youtube-channel/
  12. Curiosity Has the Power to Change Behavior for the Bette "http://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2016/08/curiosity-behavior.aspx"
  13. Wikipedia: Clickbaits https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clickbait
  14. Prakhar Biyani; Kostas Tsioutsiouliklis; John Blackmer (2016). “8 Amazing Secrets for Getting More Clicks”: Detecting Clickbaits in News Streams Using Article Informality Yahoo Labs
  15. The Ethics of Clickbait "http://wegobusiness.com/the-ethics-of-clickbait/"
  16. You’ll Be Outraged at How Easy It Was to Get You to Click on This Headline "https://www.wired.com/2015/12/psychology-of-clickbait/"
  17. "How We Broke Democracy" https://medium.com/@tobiasrose/empathy-to-democracy-b7f04ab57eee#.ocvg9cr5u
  18. Click Bait Websites and the Age of Misinformation "https://jordandetmers.com/2014/09/11/click-bait-websites-and-the-age-of-misinformation/"
  19. Forget Facebook and Google, burst your own filter bubble http://www.digitaltrends.com/social-media/fake-news-and-filter-bubbles