regarding Dwell Time 11%

By Ole Eichhorn0%

9/30/2024, 11:29:00 AM

BS Summary: This article contains 7 faulty reasoning types, including In-Group Bias, Straw Man, and Hasty Generalization, with Biased Writer Voice as the most egregious example at 10.5% saturation with 39 hits. Analysis detected 143 faulty-reasoning hits from 372 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 27.8% and a BS Rank of 11% (15,062 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 89.60% of the article peer group.

EOQ! 
Wow, can't even believe we are at the end of another third quarter. 
And you know what that means: Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years', bam bam bam bam. 
And poof another year in the books. 
Happens faster and faster every year. 
I've been ruminating on the "dwell time" of an online post. 
When you post something to a blog, on X, on Facebook, wherever your friends / followers / whomever see it for as long as it is your "current" post. 
As soon as you post something else, it gets pushed down the stack a bit, and people are less likely to see it. 
This is independent of the relative value or importance or length of the post. 
I could post a lengthy diatribe with incredible analysis, and then immediately post something trivial, and that diatribe will become history while the trivia might live on a long time. 
Frequent readers will know, I like my blog's "flight" feature, in which it displays what I've posted on this day each year past. 
If there's no post for this day, it backs up into recent days to show the most recently posted thing from that year. 
So items that had a big time gap after they were posted "last longer" in the daily flights, a most evocative illustration of dwell time in action. 
Some blogs (and some social media) have a "keep at top" feature, which artificially boosts dwell time. 
I used to do this myself, every once in a while, but haven't for a while. 
I have mentally played with the idea of recording inbound traffic (hits) for each post, and sorting archived posts by "max hits". 
That would make reader interest a part of dwell time, which would be good. 
Presumably if something was of interest to many or externally linked it likely would be of interest to the next reader. 
Or I could just keep posting whatever whenever and let the chips fall where they may. 
Heh. 
{Update: added digression: whoever wanted Google's .webp images? 
Why do they exist? 
Someone spent all that time inventing a new image format just so we all have to convert them back to JPEGs. 
What an incredible waste of time.} 
Confirmation Bias
0%
Anchoring Bias
0%
Availability Heuristic
0%
Representativeness Heuristic
0%
Hindsight Bias
0%
Overconfidence Bias
0%
Framing Effect
0%
Loss Aversion
0%
Status Quo Bias
0%
Sunk Cost Effect
0%
Optimism Bias
0%
Pessimism Bias
0%
Negativity Bias
0%
Self-Serving Bias
0%
Fundamental Attribution Error
0%
Actor-Observer Bias
0%
In-Group Bias
6.2%
Out-Group Homogeneity Bias
0%
Halo Effect
0%
Horn Effect
0%
Dunning-Kruger Effect
0%
Recency Bias
0%
Primacy Effect
0%
Blind-Spot Bias
0%
Ad Hominem
0%
Straw Man
5.6%
Appeal to Authority
0%
False Dilemma
0%
Slippery Slope
0%
Circular Reasoning
0%
Hasty Generalization
5.6%
Red Herring
0%
Bandwagon
5.6%
Appeal to Emotion
1.6%
Begging the Question
0%
Post Hoc (False Cause)
0%
Tu Quoque
0%
Burden of Proof
0%
Appeal to Nature
0%
Composition/Division
0%
Anecdotal
0%
No True Scotsman
0%
Ambiguity (Equivocation)
0%
Gambler’s Fallacy
0%
Middle Ground
0%
Personal Incredulity
3.2%
Special Pleading
0%
Genetic Fallacy
0%
Unattributed Quote
0%
Quote-first Misdirection
0%
Biased Writer Voice
10.5%
Indoctrination
0%
Politically Left Leaning Bias
0%
Politically Right Leaning Bias
0%
Attempt to Sell a Product or Service
0%

372 words analyzed.

Analysis

Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.