EFF is the latest organization to leave X
In 2018, EFF’s posts to Twitter saw between 50 and 100 million impressions per month, she said.
By 2024, its 2,500 posts on the social platform generated around 2 million impressions per month.
Last year, EFF’s 1,500 posts earned roughly 13 million impressions for the entire year.
“To put it bluntly, an X post today receives less than 3% of the views a single tweet delivered seven years ago,” Thomas wrote.
“We stay because the people on those platforms deserve access to information, too.
We stay because some of our most-read posts are the ones criticizing the very platform we’re posting on,” Thomas said.
“X is no longer where the fight is happening.
” (Ouch!) EFF is one of many organizations to ditch X, following other high-profile exits that have included various news publishers like NPR, PBS, The Guardian, Le Monde, and others, as well as many academics, celebs, local governments, and more.
For some, like NPR and PBS, the departure was a reaction to Musk’s decision to falsely label them as “state-affiliated media,” a title typically reserved for mouthpieces of governments that lack editorial independence — such as Russia and China-based propaganda networks. For others, like Le Monde, it was a reaction to Musk’s close ties with Trump.
But it’s easier to take a stand when you have little to nothing to lose.
That’s left many newsrooms to fold under the financial pressure or conduct layoffs. In Bier’s debate with Silver, he accused newsrooms of using X wrong. Bier stressed that news outlets like The New York Times should be posting in a way to encourage conversation on X’s platform, not just using X as a news feed to publish a simple headline and a link.
“The conversion to off-site traffic is very middling,” Silver wrote on X.
“Maybe 2-3% of the readership for a Silver Bulletin article instead of ~1%.
” By comparison, he noted that Twitter used to send FiveThirtyEight around 15% of its traffic.
Even some of Silver’s detractors seemed to agree with his assessment of X, which he published in a newsletter.
(For instance, Silver pointed out that the account “Catturd,” a right-wing influencer known for spreading conspiracy theories, sees more engagement than The New York Times. )
Musk, of course, dismissed this analysis, calling Silver’s data “bullshit” in a reply.
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: