Social media’s paradox: toxicity increases traffic and ad revenue for corporations.
Loading data from Talking to Chatbots Dataset reddgr/talking-to-chatbots-chats …
😎 “It’s designed to make money. Money intoxicates people sometimes. But the paradox of social media is not people getting toxic seeking for money, but corporations making money the more toxic people get (fact learned from 20 years on the Internet: toxicity -> traffic -> ad revenue)”
🤖 “It’s designed to make money. Money intoxicates people sometimes. However, the paradox of social media is not that people become toxic in pursuit of money, but rather that corporations earn more as people become more toxic (a fact learned from 20 years on the Internet: toxicity leads to traffic, which leads to ad revenue).”😎 That’s too long. The limit was 280 characters. Only fix grammar or spelling mistakes
Note: Minor adjustments were made for clarity and flow, while preserving the original meaning and style.
🤖 “It’s designed to make money. Money intoxicates people sometimes. But the paradox of social media isn’t people getting toxic for money, but corporations making more as people get more toxic (fact from 20 years online: toxicity -> traffic -> ad revenue).”
Note: The text has been revised for grammar and conciseness to fit a 280-character limit, with only minimal adjustments for clarity.
Hugging Face Dataset Metrics
All the conversation prompts, responses, and metrics are available to download and explore on Hugging Face dataset reddgr/talking-to-chatbots-chats: