We already know that "bestselling" authors like Le Coulter and Rush "Dominican Boys" Limbaugh aren't really as popular as their sales numbers claim. The NYT list of top selling books has to denote "bulk buying" next to certain books, indicating that some books are in fact bought up by institutions and not individuals, Scaife-esque front groups are probably responsible. But this tech piece about Drudge suggests that there is an internet form of crotch-stuffing that distorts winger web traffic as well:
The Drudge Report may be the most successful independent news site on the web. Matt Drudge's decade-old site sets the news agenda, and not only for conservative platforms such as Fox News. The fedora-wearing eccentric's property, considering it's largely put together by just two people, has an impressive audience: more than 1.2m unique visitors from the US in February, according to Comscore. But those devotees may not check the site quite as often as Matt Drudge would claim.
A site's 'meta refresh' setting is a web page's meta tag used to specify a time-interval after which a web browser will automatically refresh the page. Most sites leave it to readers to call for the latest version of a page; but popular news sites often assume that visitors will leave their pages open, and ensure the page is reloaded so that the latest headlines show.Nothing wrong with that -- except that the Drudge Report is automatically refreshed way more often than the frequency of new stories would justify. At 20 times an hour, Drudge is twice as aggressive in his use of this tactic as the next news site we checked.
What's the effect on the site's traffic? Each refresh counts as a new pageview, whether or not the user is watching, or the window remains visible. And there must be plenty of these inattentive readers: one site owner I know experienced a 20% jump in traffic after he introduced, as an experiment, an automatic refresh every half hour. Drudge loads anew every three minutes.
So, when Matt Drudge trumpets his gigantic traffic -- he recently passed the 20m pageview a day mark -- take that claim much like one should parse one of his headlines. There's some truth to it -- Drudge is indubitably popular -- hyped up to the point of misdirection.
Wow, a winger overhyping their numbers? I'm shocked, shocked I tell you.
I'll let Lambert chime in on Corrente's refresh rate, but I do know that I really hate sites that do that- I'll refresh when I want to, and I know how to use my bookmarks. But once again I'm reminded that I just cannot and will not believe that wingnut ideology is as "popular" as they claim. Especially now, when Bush's numbers are in the mid to low 30s and hatred of the war is at an all-time high and growing.
shakes booty "Don't....don't don't don't...don't believe the hype."
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Look! More Cheetohs-stained spooge!
Corrente's refresh rate is user driven. When a user clicks a link that builds a new page, that's a refresh (or a "view").
But what a great idea Drudge has, to be sure! Refresh every three minutes, whether the user does anything or not, and each refresh bumps the hit count!
But why stop at every three minutes? Turn the knobs all the way up to 11!
No authoritarians were tortured in the writing of this post.
"First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win." -- Mahatma Gandhi