Thank for you the clarification...a distinction without much of a difference, though, and it also validates most of what I said to be correct, not "Wrong!" as you said. It would not count was two viewers if someone did the same thing with a TV interview to watch part of it and come back to watch another part of it later unless it was two completely separate airings (but those ratings would not combine in any event), and if someone sits down to watch a TV program, they most likely watch the whole thing anyway.
That is some egregious bullshit.
You opened your first post on this thread, #14, with this complete bluff:
"“views” is anyone scrolling past the video. And if the same person does that more than once, it is another view" - Republican Wildcat
And then followed that up with:
"That doesn’t diminish the fact enough people were interested too [sic] at least scroll past it that many times - but difficult to say it was the “most watched interview ever.” - Republican Wildcat
Then you got TOLD.
"The main Twitter video view metric is triggered when a user watches a video for at least 2 seconds and sees at least 50% of the video player in-view. This applies to View metrics for both uploaded videos and live broadcasts." - Brown Deer