Welcome to the daily analytical report about Steemit.
All the information presented in this report are based on the data collected from the blockchain until 2017-09-12 midnight UTC time. The goal of this report is to provide you with a clear view on what is happening daily on Steemit.
1. New users
This chart shows the number of newly registered users on Steemit and how many of them became active. We see that a lot of accounts are registered, but never used.
Warning: this graphic is kind of dynamic! A user can register one day and become active a few days later. Therefore, the number of active users on a specific date may change from day to day.
In this graph, the orange line shows the total number of registered accounts.
The green line shows how many of them have been active at least once (by active users, I mean those who made at least one post, comment or upvote). They are included even if they become inactive later.
2. Active users
These graphs show the activity of users over time and in more details for the last 30 days. They use the same definition for active user as stated above.
The last graph is a monthly summary of the active users. It allows you to compare Steemit's values to those one usualy published by other social networks.
3. Posts And comments
These graphs show the evolution of posts and comments for the whole blockchain lifetime and for the last 30 days.
4. Curation
These graphs show the evolution of curation (upvotes) for the whole blockchain lifetime and for the last 30 days.
5. Daily transactions
This graph shows the number of daily transactions. This give you an idea of the whole activity on the blockchain.
6. Categories
This graph shows the tag has been the most used for publishing posts for the whole blockchain lifetime.
This graph shows the tag has been the most used for publishing posts last day.
7. Distribution
This graph shows the distribution of the reputation among users. Accounts with a reputation lower than 25 have been removed to keep the graph readable.
This graph shows the number of users according to their voting power (it now includes the new "Inactive" and "Red Fish" levels - check @steemitboard blog for more info about this).
This graph shows cumulative distribution of the voting power. It enables to see the total voting power of each level.
8. Payout evolution
These graphs show the maximum reward paid on a post (or comment) for each day (whole blockchain life and last 30 days).
These graphs show the total of the distributed payout (posts and comments) for each day.
These graphs show the average and median payout per post for the last 30 days.
The last one indicates that if yesterday you got the latest value shown on this chart for your post, you should be happy because there are as much people that have earned more than you than people that have earned less than you.
I hope you find those stats useful. If you would like to see different stats, feel free to drop me a comment. Your feedback is more than welcome.
Thanks for reading.
footer created with steemitboard - click any award to see my board of honor
Support me and my work as a witness by voting for me here!
You Like this post, do not forget to upvote or follow me or resteem
Active users on the decline thats interesting im curious if its because of writers block or some people tried to gain something out of this platform easily rather than hard work?
Thank you @arcange for this compilation. I like it, great stuff!
Thanks!
I appreciate your work on this - been trying to get my sons interested in steemit and this kind of information should help with that... plus I like to know these things as well. Helps keep my perspective balanced. Thanks!
Glad to help =)
Thanks for the data, @arcange. Each day I review this and spend a little time wondering what it all means and how I should respond. And each day the answer is the same: I'm not sure, but I need to execute my gameplay here in the interim...
You can really see the difference with the registered and active users. Almost as if people signed up, thought "oh wow! I can get in on the cryptocurrency thing..." then they discovered it's not a get-rich-quick thing and lost interest.
And about the time I joined (July 2017) the registered users REALLY took off.
thanks for sharing these statistics. Kind of puts comments, posts, curation and users in perspective for me.
July 2017 was the time when bitcoin price got to the Moon. Users started to find out what is that thing crypto anyway. They found this social network where you get paid for the same things you did for ads - sounds interesting.
So many dead fishes are a clear sign that mainstream users are not yet ready for beta.
Thanks
Thank you for your support!