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Believe none of what you hear and half of what they Twitter

 

As human beings, we are creatures of community and we constantly build and thrive off of each other.  Unfortunately, we are sometimes easily influenced by those around us, especially if we are the odd one out.  What is popular is often easier to follow; who would believe that crazy person who said the Earth revolves around the Sun?
 
We experience this tendency all the time–from the time you were in grade school and picked on someone because everyone else was to now when you decide to try that restaurant everyone loves just one more time, even though you’ve hated it the first three. The Internet is very similar.  Twitter and other social media give people a perfect setting to share important stories and vital information within seconds, but can also spread false information like a plague.
 
 
 
I know you’re thinking that you are not that ridiculously gullible and could tell the difference between truth and fiction.  However, social media is so widespread that for every one million people online that would instantly identify a hoax, there are an equal amount of people who would believe it.
 
If you look deeper, this large audience could be interpreted as exactly how and why social media works for advertising and marketing. Someone will always be willing to  buy Britney Spears‘ hair ball on eBay or look for a company to help them decorate their house entirely in popcorn.  Bottom line, there is an online audience for just about everything, hence why digital marketing is simply golden.