This page shows how Twitter rearranges replies, hiding some of them.
Each table below shows a tweet from @stevedaines and noteworthy replies to that tweet.
Each reply tweet was re-ranked by a formula designed to determine whether a reply is on-topic
and good quality. (In this case, the re-ranking was done using the "formula1js"
algorithm).
Then, the revised ranking was compared with how Twitter ordered the tweet replies in the page.
The revised ranking was used to select tweets that Twitter seems to have shown higher than they should have been.
Those tweets are listed in the "Anomalous elevated tweets" section in each table.
Likewise, the revised ranking was used to select tweets that Twitter seems to have shown lower than they should have been.
Those tweets are in the "Anomalous suppressed/hidden tweets" section in each table.
That section contains both tweet replies that were suppressed (shown lower than they should have been) and
hidden.
The "Other hidden tweets" in each table has additional hidden tweets, those that weren't ranked highly
in the revised ranking.
Note: a hidden tweet is one that's hidden behind the "Show more replies" link at the end of the reply page.
Few probably click that link, and the account that was replied to might not see those hidden tweets
on their "Notifications" page depending on their settings.
Hidden tweets are highlighted in light red. Each tweet is followed by three orders: the original order (as
shown by Twitter), the rank order (as determined by the revised ranking; lower rankings are better),
and the date order (earlier tweets have a lower order).
Some tweets are put even lower down, into an "AbusiveQuality" section. Those are highlighted in light purple.