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To clarify: Tiktok’s algorithm was not responding to the word “algorithm”, as if users were calling in its name. Only users understood that under the cover, Tiktok (such as Instagram, Facebook and Twitter) was basically a large mathematical equation, adding weights a set of different signals to determine the amount of access that each post will receive. By commenting any Text on the post, they can add a few points to the “Comments” column, which leads to a mail total access to a little top.
In particular, collect more than 70,000 likes. The account he published, which he said was 21 years old, Yesenia, was only one job. “Bro gets Kpop Stan on this,” the comment said.
K-POP “Stans”, for those who do not know the ordinary, are lovers of super Korean groups such as BTS and BlackPink. There are millions of them in the United States and around the world, and they are youth, emotional and online in general.
In the summer of 2020, the K-POP Stans was famous for disrupting fanatic movements online by “dumping the area” with healthy aimals. In the week that Trump Rally Tolsa had previously announced, a group of white outstanding people started publishing on Twitter using the #Whitelivesmatter retail sign. Within hours, the use of the retail sign has risen, but anyone who has already clicked on it has been met with pictures and videos of K-POP artists, songs and dances. Retirement of racist stickers, which are immersed by error and error, are reorganized under the #Whitelifematters and #Whiteotwednesday, only to find those hashtags that K-PO immersed as well.
In the week before #Whitelivesmatter, K-Pop Depots put their attention to Dallas, where the Dallas Police Department launched an application through which citizens can download reports on “illegal activity of protests” after the death of George Floyd. 16-year-old K-POP fan tweeted tweet from her followers to “submerge this shit” with clips of K-POP stars. “Make it difficult for them to find anything next to our dance,” she wrote. The next day, the Dallas Police Administration announced that its iWatch has witnessed “technical difficulties” and had decreased.
Just minutes after Yesenia invitation to fill the K-Pop Stans, the responses began to flow. “We have heard that you are on it,” one of them wrote. “We are here now,” another mockery. “On that,” said a third, who published the comment with “Nailcare” emojis, and is often used to transfer Saas and trust. Trump’s Tiktokers chanted without K-POP links, as they encouraged Stans, designed their own posts on K-POP accounts, invited them to work, and thanked them-as many commentators put them-for their service.
On Friday, June 12, less than 24 hours after Laupp published her video clip, Tweet Brad Parskali, the director of Trump campaign, that more than 200,000 tickets were already dedicated to gathering. Later in the day, he wrote: “Correct now 300,000!” Two days later, “I just passed 800,000 tickets. The largest data data and subscription at all times by 10x.” Tweet Trump also: “Ask for nearly a million people tickets to gather Saturday night in Toulsa, Oklahoma!”
TikToKers has republished a tweet with a reincarnation: “Who asked all these seats though!?”