On X, a link to a news article actually triggers an algorithmic penalty.
Scientists confirm: This is the most effective way to get your cat’s attention, according to new research
Elderly Couple Refuses Reserved Seats—Viral Train Standoff Sparks Fiery Debate on Courtesy
Nate Silver, a statistician and not a journalist by profession, has recently made waves with his critique, overshadowing years of similar grievances from the press sector. In a detailed piece released this week, he assessed X as nearly useless for following breaking news, such as wars, last-minute revelations, and real-time crises. He argues that the platform’s algorithm consistently suppresses posts that contain external links.
A mere few hundred likes despite 53 million followers
The case of the New York Times starkly illustrates this issue. Despite having 53 million followers on X and world-renowned journalists breaking major news stories, their posts often garner less than 400 interactions (including likes, shares, and comments). In contrast, Globe Eye News, a news aggregator with no editorial team or journalists, has fewer than one million followers yet regularly secures over 8,000 engagements per post. This aggregator never includes links, while the Times includes them in 88% of its posts.
The Nieman Lab, affiliated with Harvard, employed Claude to analyze the 200 most recent tweets from 18 major media accounts and evaluate their engagement.
- CNN includes links in 90% of its posts.
- The Wall Street Journal includes them in 98%.
Why You Should Never Reheat These Foods in the Microwave – The Hidden Dangers Experts Warn About
I tried the top 5 guard dogs—here’s what makes these breeds the ultimate protectors
The findings are clear: traditional media outlets use many links and engagement is nearly non-existent.
Fox News, the outlier who cracked the code
For Fox News, only 9% of its tweets include an external link. Instead, they feature embedded videos, images, and native graphics. The network enjoys the third-highest engagement rate in the sample, trailing only Globe Eye News and Leading Report, another aggregator that doesn’t use URLs.
Nikita Bier, a product manager at X, responded to the criticisms by attacking the quality of the Times’ tweets rather than defending the algorithm. He advised media outlets to produce thoughtful content instead of merely posting a sentence with a link.
The root of the issue lies in the economic model
Subscription-based models now dominate the English-speaking press, requiring them to draw readers back to their sites. Without traffic, subscriptions and therefore revenue are lost. Adapting one’s content to fit the retention strategies of X—which altered users’ feeds with its translation—means undermining the very funding structure on which journalism relies.
In 2016, Parse.ly pointed out that news often originated on Twitter. X continues to generate minimal traffic as before. Now, it also hinders the real-time flow of information. The media have lost both functions over the past decade, with no formal announcement ever made.
Similar Posts
- Meta Confirms: Facebook Algorithm Penalizes Link-Containing Posts
- Twitter’s New Strategy: How X Plans to Keep Users from Leaving the App!
- X Boosts Visibility for Premium Subscribers: What the Latest Study Shows
- X Revamps Link Opening Strategy: Keeps Users Engaged Within App
- Why LinkedIn Posts Are Getting Fewer Views: Insights Into Algorithm Changes

Samantha Klein is a seasoned tech journalist with a sharp focus on Apple and mobile ecosystems. With over a decade of experience, she brings insightful commentary and deep technical understanding to the fast-evolving world of consumer technology.