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Thursday, November 14, 2024

Facebook changes ‘trending’ feature to favour stories published by multiple news publishers

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Facebook is updating its “trending” feature to favour verified news stories and counter fake news.

The changes will see the social media site’s trending list consisting of topics being covered by several publishers, rather than focusing on subjects drawing the biggest crowds of people sharing or commenting on posts.

The switch is intended to make Facebook a more credible source of information by steering hordes of its 1.8 billion users towards topics that “reflect real world events being covered by multiple outlets”, Will Cathcart, the company’s vice president of product management, said.

Facebook also will stop customising trending lists to cater to each user’s personal interests.

Instead, everyone located in the same region will see the same trending lists, which currently appear in the US, UK, Canada, Australia and India.

That change could widen the scope of information Facebook’s users see, instead of just topics that reinforce what they may have already heard or read elsewhere.

The broader perspective might reduce the chances of Facebook’s users living in a “filter bubble” – only engaging with people and ideas with which they agree.

Facebook introduced its trending list in 2014 in response to the popularity of a similar feature on Twitter, the short-messaging service that competes for people’s attention and advertising revenue.

Questions about Facebook’s influence on what people are reading intensified last summer after a technology blog relying on an anonymous source reported that human editors routinely suppressed conservative viewpoints on the site.

Facebook sacked the small group of journalists overseeing its trending items and replaced them with an algorithm that was supposed to be a more neutral judge about what to put on the list.

But the automated approach began to pick out posts that were getting the most attention, even if the information in them was bogus.

Some of the fake news stories targeted Democratic presidential nominee Hilary Clinton, prompting critics to believe the falsehoods helped Mr Trump overcome a large deficit in public opinion polls.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg initially brushed off that notion as “crazy”, but in December the company announced a raft of new measures to curb the spread of fake news.

To discourage the creation of fake news in the first place, Facebook also is banishing perpetual publishers of false information from its lucrative ad network.

Google, which operates an even larger digital ad network, has taken a similar stand against publishers of fake news.

In a report released on Wednesday, Google said it had exiled about 200 publishers from its AdSense network for various misrepresentations, as part of a review conducted during the six weeks of last year.

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