Facebook changes News Feed algorithm to limit posts from spammers

APD NEWS

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Facebook said on Friday that it is introducing changes to the algorithm behind its News Feed to limit the reach by users who frequently post click-bait stories, links to sensationalist websites and misinformation.

The move is another step by the world's largest social network to weed out spam, a battle Facebook has been fighting for years but which is seen as increasingly important after hoax news stories were widely circulated during last year's US presidential campaign.

Facebook said the change would reduce the influence of a "tiny group" of people who share vast amounts of low-quality public posts every day.

Only about 0.1 percent of people who share more than 50 posts a day fall into that category, the company said.

Facebook is stepping up efforts to clamp down on false information and low-quality posts.

The change would affect only links shared by these people, not their photos or other posts, the company said.

"Our research shows that there is a tiny group of people on Facebook who routinely share vast amounts of public posts per day, effectively spamming people's feeds," Adam Mosseri, Facebook's vice president for the News Feed, said in a blog post.

Ahead of the November 8 US presidential election, Facebook users saw false news reports saying Pope Francis endorsed Donald Trump and that a federal agent who had been investigating Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton was found dead.

An Apple laptop displays a Facebook Live feed of Jerome Powell, governor of the US Federal Reserve, during a speech at an Economic Club of New York event in New York, US, on Thursday, June 1, 2017.

The algorithm behind the News Feed determines which posts people see from friends, advertisers and other sources, and the order in which they appear depending on how users responded to previous posts.

Facebook, which has 2 billion monthly active users, frequently tweaks the computer code behind the News Feed.

The latest adjustment will have a negligible effect, said Jennifer Grygiel, a Syracuse University communications professor who monitors social media, in a telephone interview, adding that Facebook needs to hire more content moderators.

"Communications platforms used to employ a whole lot more humans, but what we've been led to believe now is that technology will solve everything," Grygiel said.

In May, Facebook announced a change that would give lower prominence to links that lead to pages full of deceptive or annoying ads.

A change in August was designed to deemphasize stories with clickbait-style headlines.

Friday's change will de-prioritize links from specific spammers, Mosseri said.

(CGTN)