Lethbridge Herald

Facebook users can expect a nudge

FOUNDER WANTS TO NUDGE PEOPLE TOWARD ONLINE GROUPS

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — SAN FRANCISCO

At Facebook, mere “sharing” is getting old. Finding deeper meaning in online communitie­s is the next big thing. CEO Mark Zuckerberg is no longer satisfied with helping people share baby pictures and live video — or fake news and hate symbols — via the social network he created. So the Facebook founder wants to bring more meaning to its nearly two billion users by nudging them into online groups that bring together people with common passions, problems and ambitions.

Much like the creation of Facebook itself — the largest social-engineerin­g project in history — that shift could have broad and unanticipa­ted consequenc­es. Facebook will apply the same powerful computer algorithms that made its service irresistib­le to so many people to the task of nudging users toward groups they’ll find equally appealing.

That would also have the effect of encouragin­g people to spend more time on Facebook, which could boost the company’s profits. While the company doesn’t currently place ads in its groups, it “can’t speak to future plans,” Alex Deve, the product director for Facebook Groups, said in a statement.

Advertisin­g is virtually Facebook’s only source of revenue; it brought in almost $27 billion dollars in 2016, 57 per cent more than the previous year.

The shift comes as Facebook continues to grapple with the darker side of connecting the world, from terrorist recruitmen­t to videos of murder and suicides to propaganda intended to disrupt elections around the world. For Zuckerberg, using his social network to “build community” and “bring the world closer together” — two phrases from Facebook’s newly updated mission statement — is a big part of the answer.

“When you think of the social structure of the world, we are probably one of the larger institutio­ns that can help empower people to build communitie­s,” Zuckerberg said in a recent interview at the company’s offices in Menlo Park, California. “There, I think we have a real opportunit­y to help make a difference.”

Zuckerberg outlined his latest vision at a “communitie­s summit” held Thursday in Chicago. It’s the company’s first gathering for the people who run millions of groups on Facebook, a feature the company rolled out years ago to little fanfare. That’s all changing now.

For those who have never come across them, Facebook groups are ad hoc collection­s of people united by a single interest, who can use the service’s group features for sharing thoughts and photos, offering support and organizing events. Originally conceived as a way for small circles of friends and family to communicat­e more privately, groups have evolved over the years to encompass hobbies, medical conditions, military service, pets, parenthood and just about anything else you could think of.

To Zuckerberg, now 33, the effort to foster “meaningful” communitie­s reflects his recent interest in ways Facebook can make the world a less divisive place, one that emerged following the fractious 2016 presidenti­al election.

He has previously talked about the need to bring people together in both a lengthy manifesto he published earlier this year and during a commenceme­nt address at Harvard University last month.

That’s the theory. Practice is something else.

Data-driven to its core, Facebook has quantified “meaning” so it can be sure people are getting more of it.

(As an oft-repeated saying in the tech industry has it, “if you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it.”) And what Facebook aims to maximize is the time people spend in its online groups.

In fact, Facebook explicitly defines a “meaningful” group as one that someone spends at least 30 minutes a week in.

The company estimates that 130 million of its users are in such groups, and wants that number to exceed a billion people within the next five years.

The company has already been quietly tweaking its algorithms to include more recommenda­tions about groups that users might want to join.

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