Facebook News launches to all in US with addition of local news and video

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Facebook News, the social network’s dedicated section devoted to journalism, is today launching for all users in the U.S. The feature was first

introduced in October 2019

as a limited test in the U.S. The product represents Facebook’s much-debated

new effort in wooing publishers to its platform with the promise of increased distribution.

In addition to the nationwide launch, Facebook has also added local news to its News section.

It’s impossible to properly cover Facebook News without noting how the company has had a long and troubled history with regard to how it handles news. Years ago, Facebook had offered a short list of trending stories across its network. But it later

fired

the human editors who curated that news, and its algorithms immediately

posted fake news to the untended list. That feature was removed

in June 2018.

Facebook has also over the years attempted to serve publishers with poor results.

It hosted “Instant Articles” that restricted advertising, subscriptions and the recirculation modules publishers relied on, leading

many to abandon the feature

. It touted

the “shift to video,” but inflated

its video metrics, and then pulled back on paying publishers, wiping out some businesses

. In 2018, it decided to prioritize friends and family posts

in its News Feed, shrinking referrals to news outlets.

Then there’s the not insignificant matter of Facebook’s role in spreading fake news — including for years the distribution of un-fact checked links published by biased organizations. Its platform has also been used for the spread of

propaganda

and disinformation. It’s been called out as being too favorable

to one side

or the other

. (But all that’s a whole

other

kettle

of fish.

)

This time around, Facebook is trying a different tack with regard to News.

The new product uses

journalists

to program Facebook News in addition to algorithms

to better personalize story selection. Users can react and share articles, but not comment. Users are also able to hide articles, topics, and publishers they don’t want to see, which can become problematic in terms of broadening someone’s exposure to the “other side.”

To

qualify

for inclusion in Facebook News, publishers will have to serve a sufficiently large audience and abide by integrity standards. Facebook doesn’t detail exactly how it makes determinations around integrity but says

it looks at signals such as misinformation as identified by third-party fact-checkers, clickbait, engagement bait or use of scraped content, for example.

The News tab will appear to all U.S. users as a bookmark (under the three-lined “more” menu) on mobile, Facebook says. Those who frequently visit the bookmark will see News available as a tab (a button in the Facebook app) sooner.

Since the announcement last fall, Facebook has added new features in Facebook News, including breaking news alerts, timely news digests (e.g. “COVID-19 News” or “Unrest in America”), targeted notifications, and more.

The notifications will appear at the top and may include alerts of a live video or breaking news — for example, you may currently see live coverage of George Floyd’s funeral or perhaps a breaking news alert about coronavirus.

Facebook is also now testing news video, which it didn’t have last fall, and it has introduced a local news section to Facebook News. The latter brings thousands more local and regional publications into the news experience across over 6,000 towns and cities.

The company tells TechCrunch the majority of its publishers are now local outlets, as a result. In addition, it has over 200 general news publishers.

Facebook already had a way for users to keep up with local stories by way of its “Today In” news discovery experience, which had been a separate tab. In the next several weeks, the company says it will combine that tab’s content with Facebook News to make its News section a single place for users to keep up with local news.

The News feature is live now on mobile, but the desktop tab has yet to launch.