MELTWATER'S research tracked and studied mentions of the top beauty and cosmetics companies across millions of posts from various social media like Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, or 'Gram among millenials, and YouTube, as well as blogs, review portals and online forums.
Of the four countries, Indonesia seems to be the most beauty-obsessed, as the market represents 38 percent of online chatter analyzed in
Meltwater's research; Malaysia takes second place at 29 percent, followed by the Philippines at 27 percent (Singapore only represented 5 percent).
The results demonstrate a link between surface melting and the weakening of Antarctic ice shelves and support the idea that recent ice shelf breakup around the Antarctic Peninsula may have been triggered, at least in part, by large amounts of surface
meltwater produced in response to atmospheric warming.
But far less research has been done on how the
meltwater might affect the climate system itself.
"All of our predictions of sea-level rise are missing this
meltwater component," notes coauthor Dustin Schroeder of Stanford University.
Meltwater and DataSift have the partnerships, data and AI to serve the growing competitive intelligence market with advanced analytics.
Of the 73 per cent of social media posts scrutinised by
Meltwater for online chatter related to Grab, Uber and Go-Jek throughout last year, Malaysians accounted for 82 per cent of complaints and grouses about Uber and Grab drivers.
Meltwater tracked and analysed the mentions of the film and of Priya herself across online editorial and social media.
Meltwater CEO said companies can now glean information about their competitors, which was impossible two decades ago, just from the digital breadcrumbs they leave online, according to a report in Gulf News.