graph from a web server statistics generator showing a moderate
Slashdot effect in action in 2005 Major news sites or corporate websites are typically engineered to serve large numbers of requests and therefore do not normally exhibit this effect. Websites that fall victim may be hosted on home servers, offer large images or movie files or have inefficiently generated dynamic content (e.g. many database hits for every web hit even if all web hits are requesting the same page). These websites often became unavailable within a few minutes of a story's appearance, even before any comments had been posted. Occasionally, paying
Slashdot subscribers (who have access to stories before non-paying users) rendered a site unavailable even before the story was posted for the general readership. Few definitive numbers exist regarding the precise magnitude of the
Slashdot effect, but estimates put the peak of the mass influx of page requests at anywhere from several hundred to several thousand hits per minute. The flood usually peaked when the article was at the top of the site's front page and gradually subsided as the story was superseded by newer items. Traffic usually remained at elevated levels until the article was pushed off the front page, which could take from 12 to 18 hours after its initial posting. However, some articles had significantly longer lifetimes due to the popularity, newsworthiness, or interest in the linked article. By 2005, reporters were commenting that the
Slashdot effect had been diminishing. However, the effect has been seen involving Twitter when some popular users mention a website. When the targeted website has a
community-based structure, the term can also refer to the secondary effect of having a large group of new users suddenly set up accounts and start to participate in the community. While in some cases this has been considered a good thing, in others it is viewed with disdain by the prior members, as quite often the sheer number of new people brings many of the unwanted aspects of
Slashdot along with it, such as
trolling,
vandalism, and
newbie-like behavior. This bears some similarity to the 1990s Usenet concept of
Eternal September. == Assistance and prevention ==