Facebook Is Making News Feed Better By Asking Real People Direct Questions
It’s a well-known fact
that Facebook’s flagship feature, News Feed, is run by algorithms.
Essentially,
invisible computations are going on all the time that automatically optimize
future items you see on your feed, depending on the actions you take now—what
you click on, what you like, what you comment on. The goal is “to build the
perfect personalized newspaper for 1.1 billion people and counting.”
But Facebook knows
that it can do better than relying solely on these cold computations.
Facebook is
currently running a focus-group-like program that asks people direct questions
about News Feed items in an effort to improve post relevance.
This has now
expanded to 600 people around the country, who are paid by Facebook to work
answering News Feed questions four hours a day from home. Eventually, Facebook
could offer some kind of direct questioning to its entire population of users.
The project works
like this: each of these 600 Facebook users is presented with 30 top News Feed
stories in a random order. Then they go through each story one by one. They can
comment, share, follow a link, or choose to ignore the story. After that they
answer eight questions about each item, including how much they cared about the
subject of the story, how welcome the story was in their News Feed, how
entertaining it was, and how much the story connected them to friends and
family. Finally, they are asked to write a few sentences describing their
overall feelings about the News Feed story.
Facebook itself
acknowledges there are problems with how News Feed is currently set up. It’s
already very good at delivering personal news from close friends—things like
marriages, childbirths and vacations—but it’s also overrun with items that are
sugary sweet and designed to tug at your emotions, which can dubbed the “Dozen
Doughnuts problem.”
The donut-y
content contrasts with a “vegetables” of real journalism and hard news. When so
many of those donuts are presented to you at a time, you’re bound to click on
at least one item. And that click sends a
strong signal to Facebook: you want to see more of the same thing.
Facebook could
interfere. But especially in the case of News Feed, it prefers not to be
heavy-handed “We might think that
Ferguson is more important than the Ice Bucket Challenge but we don’t think we
should be forcing people to eat their vegetables even though we may or may not
think vegetables are healthy.”
As expected, news
from close friends—especially tagged and photo stories—has been consistently
rated as highly relevant. But other things, like the meaning of a “like,” has
proven to be more ambiguous. It could mean anything from the approval of a
story to validation of a user’s connection to the author.
Unfortunately, so
far, it looks like users are less willing to engage with “meaningful” stories
or news, preferring anything that triggers a strong emotional response. But
Facebook is hopeful that when it begins asking users about sets of stories
instead of individual items people will start to reward informative content.
The real reason
why Facebook may have a vested interest in making News Feed the best product it
can be is glossed over. Facebook made $2 billion in ad revenue last quarter, more than
two-thirds of its total $3.59 billion in ad revenue for 2014.
And where do those
ads live? In News Feed. If the social network can crack the problem of what
users really want from News Feed, they can presumably apply those learnings to
ads, too—and make those ads irresistible to its users in the process.
TAIRU
TAOFEEK KOLAWOLE
LAGOS
STATE POLYTECHNIC
MASS
COMMUNICATION
HND
II
136072046
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