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Facebook Tests Removing Publishers From News Feed -- Unless They Pay (mashable.com)

According to a report via Mashable, Facebook is removing posts from Pages in the original News Feed and relegating them to another feed, forcing users to "pay to play" in order to have their content back in the News Feed. The setting is only available in Slovakia, Sri Lanka, Serbia, Bolivia, Guatemala, and Cambodia for now, but it could be rolled out to other countries later. From the report: The social network last week officially launched its secondary news feed called Explore. The feed generally features posts from Facebook Pages users don't follow. News Feed, meanwhile, hosts posts from friends and Pages users do follow. But that's not true for everyone. In six markets, Facebook has removed posts from Pages in the original News Feed and relegated them to another feed, Filip Struharik, editor and social media manager at Dennik N, wrote. That means Facebook's main feed is no longer a free playing field for publishers. Instead, it's a battlefield of "pay to play," where publishers have to pony up the dough to get back into the News Feed. It's a stark change from how media outlets have grown with Facebook. Publishers like BuzzFeed's Tasty and NowThis grew via distributing viral posts and videos on News Feed, as Ziad Ramley, former social lead at Al Jazeera English, wrote. While companies had to employ social media managers, they could generally rely on them sharing content without paying to boost it.

20 of 88 comments (clear)

  1. I nominate this article by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I nominate this article for the most confusing wording of any Slashdot article this month.

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    If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    1. Re:I nominate this article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I stopped using stupid facebook for anything and now my neighbor's dog is cured of cancer.

    2. Re:I nominate this article by GrumpySteen · · Score: 5, Informative

      Blame Facebook. It's their terminology that's confusing things.

      The News Feed is just the feed of posts from people you've friended and pages you've followed. Your sister's cat pictures are 'news' in this sense.

      A publisher is just a non-personal page that posts articles. It could be a page run by a news publisher or a charity or a community organization. I follow half a dozen small bands who keep in touch with their fans through Facebook.

      Some time ago, Facebook decided that following a page from a publisher is no longer enough for you to see all of the posts from that publisher. An algorithm decides who gets to see which posts you get to see what which ones you don't. At the same time, they added the ability for publishers to pay to promote their posts, which prevents the algorithm filtering them out of the feeds of their followers.

      That apparently didn't make enough money, so now they're testing the idea of forcing all publishers' articles into a different feed. If you live in one of the countries where they're testing it, you won't see any of the posts on pages you've followed in your news feed unless the publishers pay to get them there.

    3. Re:I nominate this article by rtb61 · · Score: 2

      They are basically charging facebook members to interact with other facebook members, they are just deciding upon a greed driven whim, who is targeted and censored and has to pay and who is not. Well beyond publishers, they will extend it out to the typical for profit youtuber as a example. The only publisher of content facebook will accept is facebook and the only acceptable propaganda is facebooks or the propaganda that pays facebook for access. Facebook users real, will just be treated like mushrooms, kept in the dark and fed bullshit. Then you have the imaginary facebook users controlled by AI selling interactions to advertisers (it works both ways and doesn't M$ cheat with numbers as well).

      With AI you can create 100 million fake users to gull advertisers into spending money, ticking and clicking and corresponding away, as advertisers slowly go bankrupt wandering what the fuck is going on even though they have really great interactions with customers on say the Google network (masters of AI of creating an illusion).

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      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    4. Re:I nominate this article by nospam007 · · Score: 2

      "Some time ago, Facebook decided that following a page from a publisher is no longer enough for you to see all of the posts from that publisher. An algorithm decides who gets to see which posts you get to see what which ones you don't. At the same time, they added the ability for publishers to pay to promote their posts, which prevents the algorithm filtering them out of the feeds of their followers."

      The word you're looking for is 'extortion'.

  2. Not shocking by VY99 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This doesn't shock me in any way. This is just who they are, and anyone who's dealt with Facebook will totally understand.

  3. Another advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This has the added bonus of censoring non-mainstream media companies, who won't be able to afford to pay.

  4. I don't care by shellster_dude · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't trust Facebook to curate my news for me. I use tools to block all Facebook News, so hopefully this just means my ad-blocking tools won't have to work overtime. Seems like a lot of hysteria over nothing.

  5. Okay by DaMattster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is a mixed bag here. On one hand, this should cut down on the yellow journalism because the outlets that are circulating garbage will go back into the woodwork like cockroaches once daylight breaks. Other other hand, there are some legitimate, non-mainstream news outlets like TYT which could suffer because they might not have the means to pay Facebook's ransom. At the end of the day, none of this has any applicability to me because I told Zuck to go suck a big fat one and deleted my account. Thank you Zuck for 3 wasted years of my life. Boy did it feel good to ditch Facebook .... Fear Of Missing Out is vastly overrated.

  6. How is this any different? by Leuf · · Score: 2

    You've had to pay to get your non-personal page posts to be shown to more than a tiny percentage of the people that follow your page for a long time. Which is why I don't use it. Every time I go to Facebook they try to get me to buy an ad to actually show my posts, that I don't make, to somebody.

    1. Re:How is this any different? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a tiny shift really. Facebook already reduced the number of organic views that you'd get for posts to professional pages by at least an order of magnitude a long time ago.

      If you use Facebook as a channel to reach your customers/fans/whatever, the game has been pay-to-play for a long time, and the only thing that matters is still whether or not you get a good return on your investment, just like any other advertising. Watch your numbers, and if Facebook isn't giving you good enough exposure, pull your funding and spend it somewhere else, whether that's Google ads for your business or posters for your local church fair to up in local stores.

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      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  7. It already was pay-to-play by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It was already pay-to-play. When I would post on my business page, it basically wouldn't show the post to people (even if it was an informational post instead of an ad) unless I paid to "boost this post." It pretty much seemed to treat content and ads as the same thing when posted on a business page. If I did give in and pay to "boost" a post, it would show the post to a bunch of click-happy people who click "like" on everything that shows up on their feeds, presumably in an attempt by FB to make it seem that I was getting value for the money I was wasting. The reality was that very few of those people actually clicked through to the website or watched the video, or whatever the intent of a given post was, they just clicked the like button, and if I looked at their profile (yes, companies can see who "likes" them) it was mostly a bunch of people who like/share everything indiscriminately (the kind of people who quickly get blocked by their FB friends).

  8. FACESPEAK! by Zorro · · Score: 2

    "Who controls the past controls the future..."
    “War is peace..."

  9. As we know.... by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 2

    Those who pay are the most truthy.....($100K in fake news being sold during 2016 elections)

  10. The Net will reroute around damage by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 2

    Information always wants to be free.

    The more you squeeze the worlds of information, the more they will slip from your tentacles, Emperor Zuckerberg, and everyone will use some other source.

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    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  11. SubjectIsSubject by p0p0 · · Score: 2

    Now I wonder if the media outlets whose articles they don't agree with suddenly can't seem to finish their transaction?

  12. Couldn't give a f**k by ukoda · · Score: 3, Informative

    I use social networks to keep up with what is happening in the lives of my friends and family. I do not use it as news network, I do not use it to find out what is happening in the world. I do not use it as commercial network, I do not do business on it. I do not like or join company pages. If someone has to pay to inject their unwanted stuff in my feed I couldn't give a f**k. I never wanted their crap in their in the first place.

    To be honest I do wonder why Facebook is still called a social network as the social aspect really seems to be secondary to the commercial aspects of it.

    1. Re:Couldn't give a f**k by temcat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That would be fine if FB didn't also hide posts from friends according to some obscure algorithm.

  13. Re:I care by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you want to keep politics to yourself then

    a) Don't play the nation's anthem before the game. It is INHERENTLY POLITICAL to play the national anthem.

    b) Don't force the players to be on the field when the anthem plays. This wasn't even an issue until 2009- before that players were in the locker room at that time.

    c) Don't force the players to pay homage to a nation that's killing their 7 and 12 year old children, denying them credit, and giving them grossly unequal and unfair police and judicial treatment (most recently shooting an innocent black man with mental issues for running when they stopped him for failing to have a red rear reflector on his bike).

    but hey.. I don't watch the NFL to begin with. When Bud Adams fired Bum Phillips, I lost all interest in the game.. over 25 years ago.

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    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  14. Re:I care by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

    They are protesting in a very respectful way.

    Are they lowering their pants?

    Are they flipping off or expressing some of the disgust they probably feel? Nope.

    They are respectfully making a silent gesture to call attention to the fact that even as multi-millionaires this nation is hurting them and people they know simply for looking a certain way.

    It's shameful, it's unchristian, it's disgusting the way this nation treats black people.

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    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.