USA TODAY US Edition

IN MONEY

In survey, 53% of adults don’t get how it works.

- Mike Snider

Your relationsh­ip with Facebook could be, well, complicate­d.

On the same day Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg testified along with Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, a new survey suggests many users are confused about how the social network functions and are conflicted about their relationsh­ip with it.

More than half (53 percent) of U.S. adults who use Facebook say they do not understand how the news feed – the site’s main feature – actually works, according to a new Pew Research Center survey out Tuesday.

Older Facebook users are even less likely to understand the news feed. Only

38 percent of those 50 or older said they had a good understand­ing of why posts appear, according to Pew’s survey of

4,594 U.S. adults including 3,413 Facebook users, conducted May 29-June 11. Among younger users, ages 18 to 29, 59 percent said they do.

“They don’t feel like they have a lot of agency or control over the content that they are getting, and many of them have not actively attempted to change or shift that content. That’s particular­ly true for older users,” said Aaron Smith, Pew’s associate director of research on internet and technology issues.

Earlier this year, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company would adjust the news feed so users would get more posts from friends and family. This was a reaction to complaints too many posts from brands and media were crowding out personal moments and an attempt to curb manipulati­on of the network, a tactic that Russian operatives used to influence the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

The goal of those changes, Zuckerberg said at the time, was to “encourage meaningful interactio­ns between people.”

Concerns about privacy, in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica crisis, which resulted in the potential mishan- dling of as many as 87 million Facebook users’ personal informatio­n, have also plagued Facebook. Those concerns, as well as the spread of divisivene­ss online in the hyper-politicize­d post-election environmen­t, has led some users to profess to using the site less – or leaving altogether.

More than four in 10 Facebook users say they’ve recently taken a break from the social network, with 42 percent saying they have not used the site for several weeks or more over the past 12 months, Pew’s new survey found.

More than one-fourth (26 percent) say they have deleted the Facebook app from their cellphone, the survey also found.

“Users of all ages were pretty much more likely to say they have taken a break at some point in time over the last year,” Smith said.

The theme of taking a break from Facebook rings true, says eMarketer analyst Debra Aho Williamson. “I feel like this is a pretty common phrase that I have heard in recent weeks that people are taking breaks from Facebook or they are using it less or they are being more careful about what they are doing or they are saying,” she said.

Some 20 percent said they deleted their Facebook account in 2018 or before, according to a survey of 1,051 U.S. consumers released in May by digital identity management firm Janrain. An additional 6 percent said they were going to delete their account, the survey found.

But saying you have quit – or plan to quit – a habit-forming service such as Facebook is not always so clean-cut. Another survey, this one conducted in May by Reuters/Ipsos, found only 1 percent of Facebook users had deleted their account, and just 4 percent had stopped using it.

About half (49 percent) of the 1,938 users in the survey had not changed their Facebook activity, while 26 percent said they were using it more.

“What people say versus what they do doesn’t always add up,” Williamson said. “Sometimes, after a few weeks or months, they realize they missed it and will go back to using it. That just shows the pretty strong hold Facebook has on people.”

Regardless, Facebook continues to grow, with eMarketer estimating U.S. users of 167.9 million in 2017, up 1 percent over the year before.

Annual growth of about 1 percent over each of the years from 2018 through

2021 is expected to increase U.S. users to

174.6 million, eMarketer says.

And as users leave Facebook, they often take their activity to Instagram, which is owned by Facebook, says Jennifer Grygiel, a professor at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communicat­ions at Syracuse University.

 ?? EPA-EFE ??
EPA-EFE
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Facebook shares slid on Tuesday after a key analyst took a big step back on the social media giant.
GETTY IMAGES Facebook shares slid on Tuesday after a key analyst took a big step back on the social media giant.

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