During Facebookâs quarterly earnings call today, Mark Zuckerberg highlighted some major changes coming to Facebook. After years of being the primary news source for many people, Facebook has decided it wants to show less political content.
According to Zuckerberg, âthere has been a trend across society that a lot of things have become politicized and politics have had a way of creeping into everything.â He noted âone of the top pieces of feedbackâ that Facebook is hearing is that âpeople donât want politics and fighting to take over their experience.â
To mitigate so the company is looking to reduce the amount of political content that shows up on peopleâs feeds. The CEO didnât go into detail about how exactly Facebook would do so but said the change is a continuation of work Facebook has been âdoing for a while to turn down the temperature and discourage divisive conversations.
To that end, the company has also decided to permanently stop recommending political groups for users to join:
âWe have to balance this carefully because we do have deep commitment to free expression. If people want to discuss [politics] or join those groups, they should be able to do that. But we are not serving community well to be recommending that content right now.â
The move follows a temporary pause in such recommendations ahead of the US elections.
My take: One could argue that this is a way for Facebook to shed responsibility, but at the same time, I could certainly do with fewer political arguments on social media. I prefer getting my news from authoritative sources, and when all people see is a headline and a blurb on social media â weâve seen that plenty of people donât actually read articles they share â itâs easy to get lost in the noise.
Presumably, youâll still be able to see news from pages youâre subscribed to, but the company could cut down on how often this content shows up on your feed. Itâs also possible Facebook will reduce the visibility of political content that people share themselves, which could help prevent the spread of misinformation.
That said, I suspect it wonât be long before right-wing groups attack such a change as a form of conservative censorship, even though at least some evidence so far suggests Facebookâs algorithms have so far favored right-wing sources.
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Published January 28, 2021 â 02:23 UTC
This article is auto-generated by Algorithm Source: thenextweb.com