Los Angeles Times

Social giant tweaks News Feed

Friends, family will get priority on Facebook, hurting media outlets.

- By David Pierson and Tracey Lien

With more than 2 billion users, Facebook for years gave media outlets a shot at a vast audience that could help offset declining circulatio­ns.

But after a year in which the spread of fake news, Russian interferen­ce and divisive politics sullied Facebook’s reputation and user experience, efforts to deliver media content over the platform may have felt like more trouble than they were worth.

On Thursday, Facebook said it would change its News Feed algorithm to prioritize posts from friends and family that spark the most interactio­n over posts from brands and publishers.

The company said the move was aimed at improving users’ well-being, even at the cost of diminished advertisin­g revenue. The change will also help distance the company from the pitfalls of politicall­y charged content that has tainted the platform since the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

In a post Thursday, Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said the changes were spurred by research that showed people had a more positive response to social media when interactin­g with people they cared about.

“We can feel more connected and less lonely, and that correlates with long term measures of happiness and health. On the other hand, passively reading articles or watching videos — even if they’re entertaini­ng or informativ­e — may not be as good,” Zuckerberg said.

The change will benefit Facebook’s long-term prospects, analysts say, but it will almost immediatel­y harm news publishers that increasing­ly turned to the social network for distributi­on.

With circulatio­ns dwindling, publishers flocked to Facebook in recent years as an imperfect alternativ­e to reach a wider audience that

had grown more reliant than ever on the social network to remain informed.

Publishers often did this begrudging­ly, knowing that they were delivering free content to Facebook in hopes visitors would click it, bringing traffic to their own websites.

Now with Facebook returning to its roots by prioritizi­ng the baby pictures and rants of relatives so common before, publishers will have an even harder time reaching audiences.

“These businesses are hugely vulnerable to the whims of a third party, and that’s not a position any business wants to find itself in,” said Richard Broughton, research director of research firm Ampere Analysis.

There are various reports that some 25% of news publicatio­n referrals come from Facebook, a sign that publishers need Facebook more than Facebook needs publishers. And while publishers’ decisions seem to have little effect on the social network and its ability to generate billions in revenue, Facebook has the ability to make or break certain publicatio­ns.

Digital media publishers have been burned before by changes to Facebook’s newsfeed algorithm. In late 2014, the social network tweaked its algorithm to focus on “high-quality” content. Shortly after the change, viral news site Upworthy, best known for its “You won’t believe what happened next” headlines that spread like wildfire on Facebook, saw its traffic plummet from 90 million in November to 48 million the following January — a drop of 46% in two months.

To safeguard against this kind of volatility, an increasing number of publishers have tried to wean themselves off advertisin­g dollars by building branded content arms or a strong base of paid subscriber­s. Few have been successful, though, and the subscripti­on model is unlikely to work for everyone.

Major news organizati­ons and specialize­d publicatio­ns have the ability to court loyal customers. Some medium-sized companies might be able to band together, like some broadcaste­rs in Europe have, to collective­ly sell advertisin­g. But it will be a challenge for anyone going at it on their own, analysts say.

“It’s the sites in the middle… they’re the ones that are really stuck,” Broughton said.

Facebook’s advertisin­g revenue will take a hit from the changes to the News Feed, but analysts say it will help de-clutter the platform and give users a more positive experience. The company’s shares fell 4.4% Friday to $179.37.

“We believe these changes will be beneficial to Facebook in the medium and long term,” said Mark Mahaney, an analyst for RBC Capital Markets. “In our view, making the feed more relevant should boost user and engagement growth over time. Facebook is making the service more social and less media, and that’s likely a positive for the vast majority of users.”

Mahaney said a recent survey his investment bank conducted showed 11% of Facebook users were extremely satisfied with the platform, down from 15% a year ago.

De-emphasizin­g news could also allow Facebook to withdraw from the controvers­ies that dogged the company the past year — which included widespread criticism that the company did not do enough to mitigate hoaxes, propaganda and content planted by Russian operatives aimed at dividing the American public.

Change was needed before Facebook becomes irrevocabl­y associated with things like fake news, experts said (though making it even harder for news organizati­ons to reach audiences won’t do anything to amend charges Facebook is contributi­ng to the decline of journalism).

The change doesn’t mean news articles will disappear from Facebook. But in order for them to be seen in News Feeds, they have to be posted by friends and family and represent content that Facebook’s algorithm believes a user will engage with.

 ?? Nam Y. Huh Associated Press ?? FACEBOOK CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the changes to the site’s News Feed were spurred by research that showed people had a more positive response to social media when interactin­g with people they cared about.
Nam Y. Huh Associated Press FACEBOOK CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the changes to the site’s News Feed were spurred by research that showed people had a more positive response to social media when interactin­g with people they cared about.

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