
Facebook said Wednesday it would give friends and family more
prominence on user feeds, a move that may hurt media outlets that rely
on the social network to draw readers.
Facebook said in a
statement that the goal of the “news feed,” which appears when users log
in, “is to show people the stories that are most relevant to them” and
that its update “helps you see more posts from your friends and family.”
The
move comes after Facebook came under scrutiny from allegations by a
former contractor that it was suppressing some political viewpoints in
its “trending topics.”
Facebook said its review found no bias, but that it would take steps to reassure users about the neutrality of the platform.
Facebook
vice president Adam Mosseri said in a blog post that an updated
algorithm that determines what users see would help people find
information that matters to them.
“We are not in the business of picking which issues the world should read about,” he wrote.
“We are in the business of connecting people and ideas — and matching people with the stories they find most meaningful.
“Our
integrity depends on being inclusive of all perspectives and
viewpoints, and using ranking to connect people with the stories and
sources they find the most meaningful and engaging.”
Even though
Facebook has emphasized it does not want to be a media provider, surveys
show it has become a key source of news for Americans and others, even
if users visit the network for other reasons.
A Pew Research Center survey last month found 66 percent of Facebook users get at least some news on the platform.
Global
trends are similar. A survey across 26 countries by Oxford University’s
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism found 51 percent of
respondents indicating they use social media for news, with 12 percent
using it as their main news source.
Facebook was by far the most important source, used by 44 percent in the total survey.
The
latest tweak in the algorithm could thus impact news organizations that
use Facebook to drive traffic and generate advertising revenues.
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