Facebook Might Finally Kill Clickbait With New Algorithm Tweaks (thenextweb.com) 50
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Next Web: Facebook is bringing two additional tweaks to its News Feed algorithm: time spent viewing and page post diversity. The former is an effort to weed out clickbait and bad content by attempting to quantify quality links. The change appears to be a mobile-first solution, as the announcement only states that Facebook will measure the time spent looking at Instant Articles or those within the mobile browser. Facebook also reports that users enjoy reading articles from a wide range of publishers, a revelation that led them to tweak the algorithm for greater diversity of page posts. In short, the idea is to reduce how often people see content back-to-back, or in short order, from the same page. For most pages, the content is spread out enough to where this shouldn't be much of a problem, but for those that post several updates in a few minutes, it could lead to some of the content not being seen.
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Facebook is the new AOL.
Facebook kills clickbait with one simple tweak... (Score:5, Funny)
Facebook kills clickbait with one simple tweak... [click here to read more!]
Re:Facebook kills clickbait with one simple tweak. (Score:5, Funny)
Facebook kills clickbait with one simple tweak... [click here to read more!]
.. and you would NOT have guessed what happened next! [click here]
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Clickbait headlines are so formulaic... it almost seems like the first step in the clickbait war would be to nuke anything with one of those formulaic headlines.
I'm not sure that clickbait is inherently bad, so perhaps evolutionary pressure to create a better headline would not be bad either.
Re:Facebook kills clickbait with one simple tweak. (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not sure that clickbait is inherently bad
I am. Clickbait does nothing but waste one's time. I've gotten to where I never click a link in facebook, especially ones that facebook "suggests", because every single God damned one of them are worth less than nothing.
I laughed at the slashdot headline. Facebook fighting clickbait? That's like a coal-fired power plant fighting global warming. CLICKBAIT IS WHY PEOPLE BUY STOCK ON FACEBOOK. Their entire business model is based on clickbait.
Re:Facebook kills clickbait with one simple tweak. (Score:4, Interesting)
Gotta fix this for you:
Facebook kills clickbait with one simple tweak! Number 6 will blow your mind!
Really though, the clickbait industry is going into a death phase and has been since last year, and with any luck it'll kill the sites. Advertising revenue is drying up, people aren't going to the sites. Some sites have been bleeding views and uniques others have simply stalled [capitalnewyork.com] and/or entering serious declines (article paywalled)like Buzzfeed which has lost ~32% [ft.com] of it's traffic since last year.. Vice for example has bled ~18% of it's traffic. [thedrum.com] Huffpo? Laying off. Salon? Laying off. Even sites like Cracked, bleeding traffic and was sold off earlier this year. Lots of stories, lots of sties besides those that live and breath on clickbait are dying. Other publications(like media) that are pushing very specific agendas, are also suffering heavily as people turn away.
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Meanwhile, traffic on my ad-free site has tripled in the last year.
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Gotta fix this for you:
Facebook kills clickbait with one simple tweak! Number 6 will blow your mind!
Really though, the clickbait industry is going into a death phase and has been since last year, and with any luck it'll kill the sites. Advertising revenue is drying up, people aren't going to the sites.
This.
And it is entirely because the advertisements have become too insidious, too annoying and too intrusive.
Advertisers have learned that if you load the advertisement, especially the interstitial too quickly, before giving the sucker... erm, I mean viewer a split second view of the content than they'll instantly turn off. So they let the page load first and then load the ad over the content.
Sadly the only defences against this are adblockers or learning which sites are not taking the piss with advertising
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Vice for example has bled ~18% of it's traffic.
Does that include traffic lost from slashdot because of beta?
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Advertisers hate him.
Find out how this website owner got rid of click-bait with this one weird tweak.
[click here]
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I'd much rather they fixed their stupid comment system, since it infects other websites with it's presence. As a single father working on my laptop, they use up the time I could be spending making 500$ a week from home! [click here]
Algorithms (Score:3, Insightful)
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Install facebook purity. it fixes most of the problems you hate about what they are doing.
Re:Algorithms (Score:4, Insightful)
Their algorithms are ... worrisome.
http://www.npr.org/2014/07/04/... [npr.org]
They can, and HAVE, manipulated their algorithms to affect 100M+ americans mood.
They can, and HAVE, manipulated their algorithms in political events. In 2012, it was just TO vote. In 2016, it very easily could be HOW to vote.
http://fowler.ucsd.edu/massive... [ucsd.edu]
Now imagine if those in control of the algorithms want to lean a race one way or another. A few less articles about Hillary, a few more good articles about Trump. Say -1/+1 every week, until the election. Subtle, but a clear influence pushing neutral folks to FBs leaning.
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All major papers survive on clickbait. (Score:1)
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Well, "clickbait" is a new word and I don't think its definition has been completely nailed down yet. The definition Google gives fits HuffPo and NYT, but wikipedia's doesn't. Wikipedia confirms my own definition. Wikipedia: [wikipedia.org]"Clickbait is a pejorative term describing web content that is aimed at generating online advertising revenue, especially at the expense of quality or accuracy, relying on sensationalist headlines or eye-catching thumbnail pictures to attract click-throughs and to encourage forwarding of
Hmmm lets see (Score:3)
Re:Hmmm lets see (Score:4, Insightful)
if page.title.contains("you"){setclickbait(true);}
Much simpler.
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Arguable for links to Youtube.
Bad for anything about bayous.
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There were two articles that appeared in my feed yesterday morning. Both had headlines about "free things to do in London this week". One served up an ad, the other told me about things that were going on in London in the coming week. Things like free exhibitions, entry to venues, fee tours, so on and so forth. There may have been a small ad or two in the content but I didn't notice or care.
Hey, dont get me wrong. I wish it were as simple as ignoring every headline tha
Were they collecting this data before? (Score:1)
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Certainly.
99.99% of the time such data is only used in aggregate. There's just too much of it to act on it on a per individual basis. When it does get acted on that way, it's scary, and laws of what is and isn't allowed need to catch up to reality. Nothing you submit to Facebook is private - nothing. Operate under that assumption at all times.
Shcoking relevation (Score:2)
This is terrible! (Score:5, Funny)
Facebook and newsfeeds? (Score:1)
The solution is to edit
What about ars technica and bgr? (Score:2)
There's clickbait and there's CLICKBAIT. (Score:2)
Adverts. (Score:2)
How about when I say "Don't show me things like this", you don't show me things like that.
Like when I cross out every sports ads, I'm probably NOT interested in Sports.
Like when I hide every fucking Timehop page and friend post that includes it, you stop fucking showing them to me.
Does it really need that much of an algorithm to do what your own options say? Why would you WANT to show me more things that I'm deliberately going out of my way to remove (and not the others that I'm not)?
I'd actually like a more direct feedback approach (Score:2)
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so companies would use clickbait AND astroturfing.
Wait, they didn't do that already? (Score:2)
Time spent looking is a metric Google have been using for years to estimate the quality of their search results (and relevance of their ads too, I suppose).
I'm surprised Facebook didn't do that.
the news feed on facebook is worthless (Score:1)
This algorithm may kill Clickbait forever! (Score:3)