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Recently, I summarized why some Chinese KOLs are experiencing a decline in popularity—the issue lies with AI comment teams. A careful observation reveals a phenomenon: the same post, some comments appear to come from different accounts, but their posting times are almost identical, and the content styles vary. This is very likely the work of coordinated AI comment studios. If detected by tools like Grok, the account's ranking will be directly affected.
The previous idea was to do nothing and just block them. However, Twitter's recommendation algorithm has recently undergone noticeable adjustments, making low-quality interactions more detrimental to content exposure. Instead of being dragged down by AI comments in rankings, it's better to take proactive measures. The current strategy is simple: block all comments suspected to be AI-generated, and adjust the algorithm preferences to prioritize high-quality interactions.
The benefits of this approach are obvious—cleaner account signals, Twitter's content distribution system will be more willing to recommend your content, and the followers' timelines will become much cleaner.