A major social platform is rolling out a feature to display users' continent of origin. The logic? When every detail of an account screams one location but the user claims another, spotting the inconsistency becomes simpler.
The move isn't about exposing personal identities—there's a clear line being drawn. Revealing someone's continent doesn't cross into doxxing territory. It's geographic context, not a home address.
This could reshape how communities assess account authenticity. Fake engagement farms operating across oceans might find it tougher to blend in. For platforms wrestling with bot networks and coordinated manipulation, broad location markers offer a middle ground: transparency without surveillance.
Still, questions linger. Will continent-level tags actually deter sophisticated operations? Or just push them to adapt? The tension between platform integrity and user anonymity keeps evolving.
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DustCollector
· 5h ago
Show the location of the mainland... Can you really stop those professional farm numbers? I've seen enough choking
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Another guise of "protecting privacy", to put it bluntly, is the monitoring upgrade
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Regarding the disclosure of continental-level information, the well-designed bot has long thought of countermeasures
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Okay, then let's see how many fake numbers we can get rid of this time... But I bet five yuan and there will be a crack plan within two months
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It feels like putting a bandaid on an arterial vessel, and the problem doesn't solve the problem at all
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Interestingly, there is a layer less anonymity... In other words, this has a greater impact on normal users
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DoomCanister
· 5h ago
Coming to this whole set again, I really thought that the mainland could check the water meter, the old buddy has long learned to change the IP
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RooftopReserver
· 5h ago
The big water fish is now stuffed haha
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ForkThisDAO
· 5h ago
Ha, another regulation in the name of "protecting privacy" sounds good but who believes it?
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Continental label? I can't get the real data, those farm numbers have already been matched with agents
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To put it bluntly, the platform wants more control, and user privacy always comes second
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This trick is useful for dealing with small retail investors, but it is not useful for real black industry organizations
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I would like to see how many "local accounts" actually operate across continents
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If you want my data and are afraid that I will know, this logic is really amazing
A major social platform is rolling out a feature to display users' continent of origin. The logic? When every detail of an account screams one location but the user claims another, spotting the inconsistency becomes simpler.
The move isn't about exposing personal identities—there's a clear line being drawn. Revealing someone's continent doesn't cross into doxxing territory. It's geographic context, not a home address.
This could reshape how communities assess account authenticity. Fake engagement farms operating across oceans might find it tougher to blend in. For platforms wrestling with bot networks and coordinated manipulation, broad location markers offer a middle ground: transparency without surveillance.
Still, questions linger. Will continent-level tags actually deter sophisticated operations? Or just push them to adapt? The tension between platform integrity and user anonymity keeps evolving.