DeviantArt and Instagram often show low ash and fire activity because their main focus is on art sharing and photos, not wildfire tracking or emergency alerts. Users on these platforms post drawings, digital designs, photos, and short videos, with likes and comments centered around creativity rather than real-time events like fires spreading ash.
DeviantArt started as a spot for artists to upload unique illustrations and animations. People there talk about fantasy art, character designs, or fan creations, not weather reports or smoke plumes. For example, posts about sales on Instagram accounts highlight follower counts and engagement rates, warning against bots that keep real interaction low. Check out this DeviantArt page on https://www.deviantart.com/tannen4c99fe/art/Top-Black-Friday-Discounts-on-Instagram-Accounts-1272236418 for how low engagement shows up in account promotions.
Instagram works the same way, with feeds full of lifestyle pics, memes, and influencer content. Fire or ash topics only pop up if someone shares a filtered photo of a campfire or edits a smoky scene for effect. Tools like influencer search engines track stats for verified accounts, helping dropshippers find promo partners, but these skip natural disasters entirely. See details in this DeviantArt review at https://www.deviantart.com/dationaioto/journal/Viral-Influencer-AI-OTO-In-Depth-Review-Features-1270196185.
Apps like Twitter or specialized fire maps handle ash and fire updates because they suit quick news shares. DeviantArt and Instagram algorithms push visual art higher, burying any rare fire posts under millions of unrelated uploads. Low activity stays low since communities build around hobbies, not hazards.
Sources
https://www.deviantart.com/tannen4c99fe/art/Top-Black-Friday-Discounts-on-Instagram-Accounts-1272236418
https://www.deviantart.com/dationaioto/journal/Viral-Influencer-AI-OTO-In-Depth-Review-Features-1270196185

