
Facebook’s new
solution to fix fake news: Prioritize content that users trust
After overhauling that focused on showing more updates from family
and friends than posts from businesses, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg on
Saturday announced another major update to the social networking platform – prioritizing news that is trustworthy, informative and local.
In a Facebook post on Saturday, Zuckerberg
said it’s important that News Feed promotes high-quality news that helps build
a sense of common ground for its over two billion users.
Here’s how this new update, starting in the
US from next week, will work.
“As part of our ongoing quality surveys, we
will now ask people whether they’re familiar with a news source and, if so,
whether they trust that source,” the Facebook CEO said.
The idea is that some news organisations
are only trusted by their readers or watchers, and others are broadly trusted
across society even by those who don’t follow them directly, he added.
“To make sure the news you see, while less
overall, is high quality. I’ve asked our product teams to make sure we
prioritise news that is trustworthy, informative, and local.
“And we’re starting next week with trusted
sources,” Zuckerberg added.
According to him, the new
update will not change the amount of news people see on Facebook. It will only
shift the balance of news they see towards sources that are determined to be
trusted by the community.
The earlier News Feed update to show more
updates from family and friends will result in less public content, including
news, video, and posts from brands in your News Feed, he noted.
“After this change, we
expect news to make up roughly four per cent of News Feed -- down from roughly
five per cent today. This is a big change, but news will always be a critical
way for people to start conversations on important topics,” the Facebook CEO
said.
He said that Facebook has got a feedback
from the community that public content -- posts from businesses, brands and
media -- is crowding out the personal moments that lead us to connect more with
each other.
The impact will vary from Page to Page,
driven by factors, including the type of content they produce and how people
interact with it.
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