Facebook Cleans Up News Feed By Reducing Click-Bait Headlines 61
An anonymous reader writes "Facebook today announced further plans to clean up the News Feed by reducing stories with click-bait headlines as well as stories that have links shared in the captions of photos or within status updates. The move comes just four months after the social network reduced Like-baiting posts, repeated content, and spammy links."
10 secrets Facebook doesn't want you to know (Score:1)
Title speaks for itself ;-)
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, it gets even better - wait until politispam pages all over the site go apeshit and claim outright censorship...
"Use our API for links" (Score:2, Insightful)
Did you notice the "use our API for links" bit at the end? Let's be honest here clickbait is far more nuanced than any algorithm could predict. FB is likely doing this for 2 reasons, neither of which actually give users better content (and would you really want FB to decide that for you anyways?)
1) They want to appear to be on the user's side
2) They want to force everyone to use their API link format - so they can better track links and clicks.
I'm sure this will remove the lowest of the low-hanging-fruit,
Re: (Score:3)
You missed "censor content they don't like" and "ship that same content to the appropriate government spooks".
Facebook is trying to appear as relevant as they were 5 years ago. Every TV "News" agency is still saying "like us" and given the games we know they are playing it's getting more and more contrived.
You won't beleive what this Facebook PR said ! (Score:2)
At first I was laughing, but the end of this video just blew my mind !
Now cue-in hordes of facebook users who will inevitably start to complain that facebook changed again their interface, and now it sucks, and that's it, they are going to deleter their account. Definitely. I swear it.
Like at each of the other 5 big changes over the last year.
Re:10 secrets Facebook doesn't want you to know (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Facebook just changed the game (Score:5, Funny)
I can see the headline now:
Facebook decides to change policy and you wouldn't believe what happened next!
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Facebook just changed the game (Score:5, Funny)
Cut the spam in your newsfeed with this one simple trick! Facebook hates this!
Re: (Score:2)
Complete with a screenshot of a computer and a randomly-placed red circle.
Spammers hate him! (Score:2)
Fuck Buzzfeed with a rusty buzzsaw.
Will this let Facebook take over the world? (Score:2)
Answer: The answer to all questions posted in a headline, is of course "NO!"
"facebook", if your not paying for the ad... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
I run ad-block and noscript, I don't see any ads for any site unless I approve the content. Being a smart consumer is good for your health...
That said, I don't visit facebook. Even back when it was the fad to have an account I never saw it as a "news" site, I saw it as entertainment (time burner). Memes are cute, but not news. I used to be able to hold a conversation with friends, but the improperly named "time line" broke that ability because anything that gets a "like" gets to the top of the stack so
Re: (Score:3)
Stop calling them clickbait (Score:2)
After reading a shameful article praising clickbait [theguardian.com] I realize the term isn't negative enough. "Bait" can be good or bad. Instead, please call them "misleading headlines" or "incomplete headlines" or "editorializing headlines."
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
That's not a catchy enough title unfortunately
Re: (Score:2)
It's not even really about the headlines, per se. What they're looking for is content that users click through to, but don't read. The clickbait headline was part of that, setting up the expectation that the user would want to at least a little time reading it (and then failing to), but it sounds as if they're trying to eliminate bad content via the measure of whether or not people spend any time reading it.
Re: (Score:1)
You're wrong. Here's why. "Bait" as you use it can be good, and for a number of reasons listed in the article you mention.
Clickbait specifically applies to things like advertising and titles on news aggregators. It can also reference baity headlines on the same site,
Here's what I found when I went to MSNBC because my go to news site had few details on today's active shooter incident.
1Thousands pay tribute to 'gentle giant'
2Scott Walker's big blund
Re:Stop calling them clickbait (Score:5, Insightful)
Clickbait in print is called "sensationalism". It defines some genres of media (tabloids) and was avoided until recently by companies that were considered higher caliber journalism. That we have no "news" above sensationalism today is telling in my opinion.
With all the hyper sensationalism today, I would be interested in seeing a large "news" site like "The Guardian" drop the sensationalism for a few weeks and see what happens. I'm guessing that readership may actually increase, if for no other reason than the appearance of being different. In a society full of bullshit a little bit of honesty may go a long way.
Could be a pipe dream too, not everyone is intelligent or worried about honesty.
Re: (Score:2)
what about the Page Three Girl
That is very important news!
Re: (Score:2)
Seriously. It's bad enough with an extension to block auto playing videos, but on a computer where the videos auto play you could hook up a hydroelectric generator to all that falling water and sell the power to raise money for charity.
Automated Clickbait Answers (Score:1)
There are some Twitter feeds that spoil the clickbait from it ( https://twitter.com/SavedYouAClick [twitter.com] is probably the most "useful" at this) but it'd be nice to automate the process so that when someone posted any headline with clickbait, Facebook would just drop the answer right below. Actually a br
Re: (Score:3)
I feel the same way when any site makes me do some stupid 20 click throughs to read an entire article.
The multiple clicks pissing me off has reached the point of 1 now. If your presenting information, and you have to make me reload the damn page 10 times to update a little paragraph, you're doing it wrong.
Re: (Score:3)
No, they aren't doing it wrong. They are doing it right for their business model, because it works. If nobody saw that crap, click through the click bait, and didn't click the "share to see what happened next" only to be tricked into sharing their account details and not ever seeing what they came to see, their business model would fail.
But enough people fall for the bullshit that I really believe that is how we get GWB and BHO as presidents!
Poor HuffPost... (Score:2)
Stop there (Score:5, Funny)
They need to be careful and make sure they don't reduce Robin Williams tributes or Ice Bucket Challenges. Otherwise there won't be anything left :(
Re: (Score:2)
They need to be careful and make sure they don't reduce Robin Williams tributes or Ice Bucket Challenges. Otherwise there won't be anything left :(
Don't worry - there will always be pictures of food and people's children and pets...
Facebook is terrified that users will learn how to (Score:1)
Buzzfeed's not nearly the worst (Score:5, Informative)
Mainstream news outlets are a lot more guilty of clickbait headlines than Buzzfeed. Don't get me wrong, Buzzfeed is a dopey website, but the mainstream sites have taken it to a whole 'nother level.
If you use the twitter, the absolutely best follow is someone called, "@SavedYouAClick", who basically takes clickbait headlines and defuses them by reading the article and giving you the bit you actually might want to know, saving you from having to click and a barrage of ads and trackers. They're really really useful, and now whenever I see clickbait, before I even think of clicking, I go see @SavedYouAClick. I wish I knew who it was so I could thank them personally.
For example, from the other day:
or,
My favorite is when @SavedYouAClick really nails some sacred cow:
Re: (Score:2)
I wish I knew who it was so I could thank them personally.
The person who runs that Twitter account is a guy named Jake Beckman.
I guess I saved you a Google search.
Re: (Score:2)
If you can lend me $50, you can save me from going to work tomorrow.
Advertising (Score:3)
This is solely about viral marketing and Facebook ad revenue. Preventing people from seeing naturally shared articles will prevent things from naturally going viral. In order to get views marketers will need to pay for views.
Have they (Score:2)
turned off Top Stories yet?
It's bullshit that one has to reset a boolean preference every few days for something no one wants.
Now if they can only get rid of chain postings (Score:3)
And every annoying "Name a word without the letter F. Bet you can't" post.
How about doing that here? (Score:2)
I know another place where there is a lot of click-bait links and summaries.
touche (Score:1)
FazeBook itself is "click-bait" (Score:2)
n/t