Zipf's power law is a general empirical regularity found in many natural and
social systems. A recently developed theory predicts that Zipf's law
corresponds to systems that are growing according to a maximally sustainable
path in the presence of random proportional growth, stochastic birth and death
processes. We report a detailed empirical analysis of a burgeoning network of
social groups, in which all ingredients needed for Zipf's law to apply are
verifiable and verified. We estimate empirically the average growth r and its
standard deviation σ as well as the death rate h and predict without
adjustable parameters the exponent μ of the power law distribution P(s)
of the group sizes s. The predicted value μ=0.75±0.05 is in
excellent agreement with maximum likelihood estimations. According to theory,
the deviation of P(s) from Zipf's law (i.e., μ<1) constitutes a direct
statistical quantitative signature of the overall non-stationary growth of the
social universe.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 2 table