San Francisco Chronicle

Facebook will rank its news sources on trustworth­iness

- By Sarah Frier

Facebook, which is cutting the amount of news in its news feed, will prioritize informatio­n from the publishers that remain on the social network by measuring how trustworth­y they are, the Menlo Park company said.

Trustworth­iness is based on a recent survey of U.S. Facebook users that gauged their familiarit­y with, and trust in, different sources of news. The results will inform the company’s ranking in the news feed, a stream of updates people see when they log in.

News sources should also be “informativ­e” and relevant to people’s local communitie­s, the company said Friday. The move helps Facebook avoid perception­s of bias in selecting what news providers to highlight.

“The hard question we’ve struggled with is how to decide what news sources are broadly trusted in a world with so much division,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote in a Facebook post on Friday. “We could try to make that decision ourselves, but that’s not something we’re comfortabl­e with.”

Publishers expressed concern about the news feed changes announced last week because many news sites have come to depend on traffic from Facebook. On Friday, Zuckerberg said he expects news to make up roughly 4 percent of the

news feed, down from roughly 5 percent today. “This is a big change, but news will always be a critical way for people to start conversati­ons on important topics.”

Facebook, which has come under fire for the spread of fake news on its service, recently said it will reduce the amount of content from brands and other company pages — including those run by publishers — in the news feed. That move refocuses the company on content from friends and family members, taking Facebook back to its roots, but it could mean

less time spent on the site, Zuckerberg said last week.

The social network has had trouble managing its role as one of the world’s most powerful news distributo­rs. Ahead of the U.S. presidenti­al election in 2016, Facebook was criticized for bias because its human curators of a “Trending Topics” section were only allowed to pick links from a set of sources Facebook designated as trusted, which excluded some conservati­ve sites.

Since then, the company has sought to address the spread of fake news while trying to avoid being the arbiter of what is true or false. It works with third-party factchecke­rs who look at articles flagged by users as potentiall­y false or misleading. Those efforts have had little impact on the overall problem.

 ?? Justin Sullivan / Getty Images 2017 ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is asking users to rank the news sources.
Justin Sullivan / Getty Images 2017 Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is asking users to rank the news sources.

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