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Facebook Is Testing a Dislike Button (thedailybeast.com)

Ever since the inception of the Like button, Facebook users have been asking for a "dislike" button. Today, Facebook is testing a "downvote" button with certain users in the comment section of posts within Facebook groups and on old Facebook memories content. The Daily Beast reports: The feature appears to give users the ability to downrank certain comments. This is the first time Facebook has tested anything similar to a "dislike" button and it could theoretically allow for content that's offensive or relevant to be pushed to the bottom of a comment feed. In 2016, citing Facebook executives, Bloomberg said a dislike button "had been rejected on the grounds that it would sow too much negativity" to the platform. It's unclear how widely the dislike button is being tested. Facebook regularly tests features with small subsets of users that never end up rolling out to the broader public. Most users currently are only able to either Like or Reply to comments in a thread. The downvote option could have radical implications on what types of discussions and comments flourish on the platform. While it could theoretically be used to de-rank inflammatory or problematic comments, it could also easily be used as a tool for abuse.

146 comments

  1. This is incendiary by postbigbang · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Like a grenade. You thought Facebook was bombastic before? Watch the fury when you can thumbs-down something. The cesspool will get deeper still. This doesn't do anything but start fights.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    1. Re:This is incendiary by Baron_Yam · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Unfortunately, negative social interaction is more engaging than positive. The users will be less happy - hell, some will be downright miserable - but they'll be more engaged, more addicted to getting likes and getting a rush from watching 'enemies' get a dislike.

      See: Reddit. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy than a social networking site with this kind of unlimited feedback system.

    2. Re: This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like on /.?

    3. Re:This is incendiary by postbigbang · · Score: 1, Funny

      Maybe it's another version of social media's dystopian future. Bring in the zombies.....

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    4. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This won't work.

      Ebay used to have positive and negative feedback. Negative feedback was used to blugeon sellers and buyers alike and they left the platform.

      Meta-moderation (eg Slashdot, Reddit) has the same problem. Too many negatives, or happen to get dogpiled by one asshole? downvoted off the platform, goodbye.

      All it does is create more walled gardens.

      Now, the idea itself isn't entirely without merit. "downvoting" should not be published. If you down-vote a comment or a story, or something, it should internally score the downvoted comment and downvoters to see if people are engaging in "mobbing" behavior (eg the same people downvoting the same stories on the same days) and zero-score those downvotes.

    5. Re:This is incendiary by un1nsp1red · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The difference is facebook is (ostensibly) limited to the people with whom you are *friends*. With reddit, anyone can up/downvote you. Facebook doesn't have the anonymity. I doubt the impact would be remotely comparable.

    6. Re:This is incendiary by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      Even that kind of implementation is going to polarize people. You'll look to see who downvoted your innocuous kitty post and growl, perhaps louder than when they downvote your Corey Booker for President post. So far, except for Angry, there hasn't really been a negative vote, only opposing/added/appended posts. It'll shock a segment of people with thin skin.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    7. Re:This is incendiary by Baron_Yam · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'll see you that '(ostensibly) limited to the people with whom you are *friends*' and raise you a 'friends, but mostly people you want to measure yourself against to boost your weak self esteem in a petty popularity contest'.

      Does Facebook allow you to see the likes and dislikes themselves on everything? Because if there isn't an account name tagged to each, it'll quickly turn to a shitshow.

      In fact, I think it will even then, because it'll get personal a lot faster.

    8. Re:This is incendiary by PrimaryConsult · · Score: 1

      Does Facebook allow you to see the likes and dislikes themselves on everything?

      By clicking on each "reaction" class (like, funny, love, angry, sad) you can see exactly who picked what. Which is funny because you can easily find people who "like" their own posts/messages.

    9. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a downvote action already though.. that Angry face you can choose is basically that.

    10. Re:This is incendiary by Wycliffe · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The difference is facebook is (ostensibly) limited to the people with whom you are *friends*. With reddit, anyone can up/downvote you. Facebook doesn't have the anonymity. I doubt the impact would be remotely comparable.

      Which is exactly why facebook should have anonymous dislikes and anonymous disagree buttons.
      Most people already live in an echo chamber but that echo chamber is magnified because very few people
      are willing to call their friends out when they post stuff they disagree with. By being allowed to
      anonymously disagree with a post you could signal to a friend that you really didn't like their racist
      or otherwise inflammatory post. They would know one of their friends disagreed with it which might give
      them pause but they wouldn't know which friend. It also might encourage people to prune their
      friend lists more often.

    11. Re:This is incendiary by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      This won't work.

      Ebay used to have positive and negative feedback. Negative feedback was used to blugeon sellers and buyers alike and they left the platform.

      One big difference is that facebook should primarily be in-person friends.

      Now, the idea itself isn't entirely without merit. "downvoting" should not be published. If you down-vote a comment or a story, or something, it should internally score the downvoted comment and downvoters to see if people are engaging in "mobbing" behavior (eg the same people downvoting the same stories on the same days) and zero-score those downvotes.

      Another option would be to show the count of the downvotes and just not the names. That way a person could see that they are posting something their friends are disagreeing with and maybe change their behavior. You could also show the downvote totals to just the original poster.

    12. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only when it comes to your own private updates.

      Your interactions on public pages, and public posts can be seen and reacted on by anyone.

    13. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The difference is facebook is (ostensibly) limited to the people with whom you are *friends*. With reddit, anyone can up/downvote you. Facebook doesn't have the anonymity. I doubt the impact would be remotely comparable.

      Mom?!!?!? YOU DISLIKED ME??!?! UNFRIEND!!!!!

    14. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like a grenade. You thought Facebook was bombastic before? Watch the fury when you can thumbs-down something. The cesspool will get deeper still. This doesn't do anything but start fights.

      Facebook, is more akin to a raging cancer than a grenade.

    15. Re: This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Combined with all the Antifa and SJW cretins doing the same to anything that triggers their delicate sensibilities... yes it would.

    16. Re: This is incendiary by sound+vision · · Score: 1

      Make a place negative enough and people do eventually disengage. Look at our national politics. Turnout is at a low point.

      If we can make the negativity in the platform more explicit, harder to ignore - that might drive down membership. I hope this is an oversight on FBs part, and I hope they continue to make that oversight.

    17. Re:This is incendiary by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Maybe. But look at the outcome of Facebook where the only counted response is positive reinforcement. People post the worst of the worst garbage and it gets likes - but no dislikes, only positive reinforcement. That may have as much to do as anything with the cesspool we have.

    18. Re:This is incendiary by shanen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Is there a kernel of insight there? Hard to tell on so few words, but it doesn't matter since I never see a mod point of any sort.

      You [postbigbang and the similar authors whose comments I've seen so far] didn't offer anything like a constructive suggestion. My basic suggestion (explained at more length below in my initial reactive comment on the story) is that the negative side should call for more effort. The negative sentiment should be less freely expressed than the positive to tilt the scales in favor of positive interactions. (Ditto earned public reputations.)

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    19. Re: This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile reddit is desperately trying to copy Facebook, Twitter, tumblr et al in an effort to stay relevant.

      I'd say with the exception of some niche subreddits, most of that idiotic site is contaminated with bots and marketing shills.

      Reddit is nothing but Facebook for 4chan wannabes.

    20. Re:This is incendiary by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      Does it end up calming the noise? Imagine the interactions:
      * Parents, Children
      *Friends, Acquaintances, Frenemies
      *Politicians
      *Marketing/Product/Services organizations (Think: XFinity)
      *Neo-political organizations; NGOs, Not-For-Profits
      *Religious entities, schools, universities, affiliated clubs/networks
      *For Sale items (already looking like a dystopic Craigslist)

      All of these can now be downvoted, and each and every post. Imagine the glee. Imagine the fuel poured on the existing flames. Grab an oxygen tank.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    21. Re:This is incendiary by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      People tend to criticize more than praise. Anger, bile, trolling, all these are in plentiful supply, and seemingly with little effort.

      Add to this brew, millions of un-vetted users in the form of bots, where posts can be searched as they spread, and bots can attack each post at will.

      This won't end well.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    22. Re:This is incendiary by mfh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The users will be less happy - hell, some will be downright miserable - but they'll be more engaged,

      You're right. However, users can choose not to participate on Facebook.

      Personally, FB is an addressbook. As long as my addressbook can't downvote my ACCOUNT, who cares?

      I don't post much and if I post something that I'm interested in and people downvote, I will ask them what's up because they are people I know. If their explanation is sketchy or rude, unfriend. Problem solved.

      Good riddance to bad rubbish.

      People really need to start growing up and taking their own responsibility regarding their behaviour and mood. If your mood is bad, why is it bad? Are you worn out from running on the FB treadmill of clicking and being possessed by your friends list?

      Every human being knows if they are getting sick from toxic things. FB's toxicity is SLOW. It won't kill you right away but it could if the depression or anxiety from whether you will get accepted or not gets bad enough.

      Dopamine is what FB is after. It's proven that a 66% negative exposure will double the high you get when you get one upvote or comment.

      But FB has had downvote installed for YEARS. It was just internal. If they say they didn't have it then why are so many user posts never seen by ANYONE?

      Once the downvote feature is live, the FB feed can go back to realtime posts from all friends. Users could then just lower visibility on friends they care less about.

      --
      The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
    23. Re:This is incendiary by flargleblarg · · Score: 2

      See: Reddit. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy than a social networking site with this kind of unlimited feedback system.

      No. A thousand times no. It really depends on the subreddit. In some subs, vile content abounds. In others, it's downvoted into oblivion, if it even appears at all. An example is /r/math — one of the most polite places on Reddit.

      In my experience, most of Reddit is pretty sane, with limited bile. Contrast this with Facebook public groups, where it's impossible to downvote slime and filth (you can only upvote posts and comments by Liking and Loving them). I'd much rather have Reddit's system. Downvotes are a good thing.

    24. Re:This is incendiary by Dracos · · Score: 1

      Facebook would morph from Digg to Reddit. As much as I'd like to see Facebook sublimated into space, a dislike button wouldn't accomplish that.

    25. Re:This is incendiary by lister+king+of+smeg · · Score: 3, Funny

      See: Reddit. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy than a social networking site with this kind of unlimited feedback system.

      Oh you naive summer child. I take it you have never been to /b/ before.

      --
      ---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
    26. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you missed the 'with this kind of unlimited feedback system' part.
      -1 Downwoted

    27. Re: This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to go back to plebbit.

    28. Re:This is incendiary by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      You think? How many people will "friend" celebrities for the sole purpose of downvoting them, if only to see the fans go bananas. How many controversial online "celebrities" will get that treatment?

      I predict a few of the more controversial people will cause a Facebook voting war.

      Not that I'm against that. Far from it. Pass the popcorn.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    29. Re:This is incendiary by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      you can easily find people who "like" their own posts/messages.

      What's the point? That's like jacking off and then sending yourself flowers for the great time you had.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    30. Re:This is incendiary by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      No matter whether it's anonymous or not, it's wrong.

      If it's anonymous, anyone controversial will find him- or herself being "friended" by a lot of people who will by default dislike anything they do, simply because they hate him or her for what they represent.

      If it's not, nobody will dare to dislike in the echo chamber because people who want to live in echo chambers rarely want to be criticized or called out for their bullshit.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    31. Re:This is incendiary by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Math is rarely controversial. Math is right, or it isn't.

      Try that with politics.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    32. Re:This is incendiary by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Reddit outdid /b/ long ago. Maybe the reddit trolls are less refined, cruder, less obnoxious and certainly less persistent. But what they lack in quality, they more than make up in quantity.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    33. Re:This is incendiary by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      It'll shock a segment of people with thin skin.

      Good. To quote Trevor Moore, "Our skin is getting thinner each and every single day, and there'll be nobody left to guide us back if all the bullies go away".

      (Here's the whole song)

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    34. Re:This is incendiary by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I'd rather grab the popcorn, this is going to be good.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    35. Re:This is incendiary by Unnamed+Chickenheart · · Score: 1

      > See: Reddit. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy than a social networking site with this kind of unlimited feedback system.

      Err.. this may vary wildly between the different subreddits.

      --
      urd
    36. Re:This is incendiary by shanen · · Score: 1

      Read what I wrote. I'm sort of agreeing with you, but offering a constructive suggestion. Or at least a starting point for the search for a solution.

      I do disagree with you new point, "This won't end well." I would say in response that the average trend has been up and things have gotten better, but there are fluctuations and we are in a jeopardy situation now. The oscillations may be too serious...

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    37. Re: This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Adding a dislike button will at best, accelerate the echo chamber, as dissent will be punished instead off ignored.

    38. Re: This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? Because your post starts at +1, as if you used a mod point to say âoelook I make a commentâ.

    39. Re: This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can call them out with your real name, you just have to do it tactfully. Anonymity alllows the greater internet fuckwad theory to flourish.

    40. Re:This is incendiary by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      Math is rarely controversial. Math is right, or it isn't.

      Try that with politics.

      You have been banned from /r/Pyongyang

    41. Re:This is incendiary by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      If it's anonymous, anyone controversial will find him- or herself being "friended" by a lot of people who will by default dislike anything they do, simply because they hate him or her for what they represent.

      Facebook shouldn't have this problem because you have to approve all friend requests. I have almost zero friends on facebook that I haven't met in person.

    42. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like a grenade. You thought Facebook was bombastic before? Watch the fury when you can thumbs-down something. The cesspool will get deeper still. This doesn't do anything but start fights.

      Facebook already sort of has a dislike button. The "Haha" option to a serious comment/statement is effectively a dislike (as I recently figured out). This just makes it official.

    43. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The funniest part is that most people only do it to get this exact reaction from others. You are literally falling directly into their ploy.

    44. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To a right winger, math, science, logic, etc are all liberal indoctrination and cultural marxism.

    45. Re:This is incendiary by flargleblarg · · Score: 1

      That isn't the point. The point is that many subreddits are very, very friendly and cordial. /r/math is just one example. The unlimited downvote feedback system has nothing whatsoever to do with some subs having scum and villainy; what causes that is the fact that anyone can create a new sub about any topic.

    46. Re:This is incendiary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Math shouldn't be controversial, but thanks to politics, apparently now algorithms can be racist...

      - CanHasDIY preserving your well-earned mod points

    47. Re:This is incendiary by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Just don't allow an infinite number of dislikes. Say you have to give two likes to something before one dislke.

    48. Re:This is incendiary by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Facebook hasn't really been about friends from nearly the start. Personally I don't even see the point of a like button, except as a bookmark.

  2. Where is the button... by toonces33 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I click to say that I dislike Facebook?

    1. Re:Where is the button... by TWX · · Score: 1

      The noscript button on your plugins icons on your browser. Just make sure it's set to never even ask to enable javascript from them.

      I'd block them at the firewall if my wife didn't use it to look at family stuff from time to time.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    2. Re:Where is the button... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Zuk made their "like" buttons look super retarded. I assume "dislike" will be just as repulsive.

  3. YouTube did this years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then they started hiding the thumbs down because there are so many thumbs down. It makes everyone look bad.

  4. Not a good idea by 110010001000 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I get triggered when I get downvoted or downmodded. Good thing it never happens to me.

    1. Re:Not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sorry... I ran out of downmod points.

    2. Re:Not a good idea by Djoulihen · · Score: 1

      Now I wish there was a "Funny Troll" mod option

    3. Re:Not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be new here. ;)

    4. Re:Not a good idea by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Given how my postings are voted, I think the "interesting" vote is for that.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  5. To be first? by TWX · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How would you like to be the schmuck they tried this feature on on first?

    "Mr. TWX, having reviewed your social-media footprint, we feel that you're a good fit for our new feature. We expect that dozens, nay HUNDREDS of dislikes will accrue on your posts. Please enjoy beta-testing this new feature!"

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  6. Give a club to the trolls by seoras · · Score: 0

    It's a seriously bad move as the status quo keeps things positive. Either you like or you ignore it. Hate is too easy and too fashionable these days. There's enough negativity in the media as it is.

    1. Re:Give a club to the trolls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There's enough negativity in the media as it is.

      Quoting the president is the media's job.

    2. Re: Give a club to the trolls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As is being presidential.

  7. Wait... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a very vague recollection that there WAS a dislike button when they first started but it was quickly removed because they found it offended people and they only wanted a positive experience. Many other sites followed suit after that.

  8. Bout Time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I say, I say!

    Steve Ray Mosher
    Trump supporter
    Borned stupid died stupider.

  9. WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the first time Facebook has tested anything similar to a "dislike" button

    No it isn't! The first few sentences I was like: Dupe! precisely because I remember them announcing bullshit like this before.

    In 2016, citing Facebook executives, Bloomberg said a dislike button "had been rejected on the grounds that it would sow too much negativity" to the platform.

    Yeah...after *testing* it. *sigh*

  10. A scam turned into a legitment function by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/social.media/08/16/facebook.dislike.button.scam/index.html

  11. The Orville Episode "Majority Rule" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Seth MacFarlane already covered what happens to society after the introduction of the down vote and it wasn't good.

    1. Re:The Orville Episode "Majority Rule" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's only true if there is an authoritative entity steering things (like facebook).

      On the decentralized social web (actual social media) there has been a dislike button for over 5 years and it hasn't been a problem.

    2. Re:The Orville Episode "Majority Rule" by PPH · · Score: 1

      You are assuming that lots of little special interests won't pop up and recruit followers to beat down stories that don't fit their world views.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    3. Re:The Orville Episode "Majority Rule" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't understand how the decentralized web works. There is no way to "beat down" stories. In a decentralized web, the stories that a person chooses to see are the stories they see. No authority is rigging the feed, and if the consumer chooses an algorithm that merely hides downvotes then they are an idiot, but an idiot who chose their own ignorance, not have it thrust upon them by someone else.

    4. Re: The Orville Episode "Majority Rule" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're talking out your ass.

      We're already on a decentralized web.
      You don't get to pick the algorithms that sites you visit use.
      So this magic web only shows you stories you want to see??? And you think FB monitoring you is bad but what you want can straight up read your mind?
      Whatever the fuck you're talking about could certainly be beat down.

    5. Re: The Orville Episode "Majority Rule" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're already on a decentralized web.

      The Decentralized Web is actually a specific concept. It used to be referred to as ReDecentralized, because, you're right that the inherent design of the web is decentralized. What it refers to is the concentration of 'broadcasters' like television instead of the decentralized thing it was intended to be.

      You don't get to pick the algorithms that sites you visit use.

      You do by choosing the aggregation software you use, whether you pay for it from a provider, or host your own (there's 100's of open source options). It terms of social feeds (which is what we are talking about, Facebook), you create connections to friends and then pull the raw feeds (similar to the old RSS), and your software does the sorting into a master feed. For now, most packages only have 1 or a handful of algorithms, but that will change as more people wake up to this possibility. For now, your choice lies mostly in picking which software you want to use, and they all federate. Right now the size of this decentralized social web is kind of 'small' relatively. Only about 2.5 million daily users. Nothing compared to behemoths such as Facebook, but it's growing.

      https://w3.org/TR/ActivityPub

    6. Re:The Orville Episode "Majority Rule" by PPH · · Score: 1

      There is no way to "beat down" stories.

      Mod -1: Clueless.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    7. Re:The Orville Episode "Majority Rule" by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      Someone please mod this AC up.

  12. relevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FTFS: "... allow for content that's offensive or relevant to be pushed to the bottom of a comment feed."

    Finally! I've always wish the relevant content were pushed to the bottom. Maybe they're learning from /. where all the stories are filled with political comments and the relevant ones are downvoted.

  13. d-i-s-l-i-k-e by dohzer · · Score: 0

    So I won't have to reply "Dislike." to posts I don't like anymore?
    Hooray!

  14. Brace for the down vote bombing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did FB do any research into other platforms down voting and how that works out? What platforms even still allow down votes? Every relatively large site I have ever been on that had down voting ended up removing it. Russian bots are gonna love this feature to further delegitimize true, factual information that doesn't support Vlad's narrative. #MAGA!

  15. This is actually the solution to FB trolls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This may seem like a bad idea but it is actually a very important solution to a very bad problem that Facebook has right now: Racist, ugly, bigoted, and generally controversial comments are shooting to the top of posts that have thousands of comments because the controversial comment has so many responses, even if those responses are negative or "angry faces"... this is rewarding the bad behavior of trolls. Adding a dislike button will be a troll killer. When you see a really nice post and the top comment is some asshole saying something negative and his comment is the top comment because of the thousands of replies telling him he is an asshole... it actually brings negativity to FB. So in this case a dislike button will be used to battle negativity and trolls.

    1. Re: This is actually the solution to FB trolls by Presence+Eternal · · Score: 1

      Piling on dislikes is actually a very powerful tool for cyber bullying, particularly when a platform uses rating to hide comments or ban people.

  16. Re:A SJW button by DamnRogue · · Score: 1

    That depends entirely on how dislikes are interpreted. Using them to suppress controversy would be a silly move on Facebook's part.

  17. This is actually the solution to FB trolls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This may seem like a bad idea but it is actually a very important solution to a very bad problem that Facebook has right now: Racist, ugly, bigoted, and generally controversial comments are shooting to the top of posts that have thousands of comments because the controversial comment has so many responses, even if those responses are negative or "angry faces"... this is rewarding the bad behavior of trolls. Adding a dislike button will be a troll killer. When you see a really nice post and the top comment is some asshole saying something negative and his comment is the top comment because of the thousands of replies telling him he is an asshole... it actually brings negativity to FB. So in this case a dislike button will be used to battle negativity and trolls. Given that... this feature should be on comments only, to move them to the bottom, not on posts.

  18. 10 likes for 1 dislike by pikine · · Score: 0

    To ensure a healthy supply of positivity, Facebook should only let a user dislike something after they've liked 10 times elsewhere.

    --
    I once had a signature.
    1. Re:10 likes for 1 dislike by pikine · · Score: 1

      Case in point, Slashdot is mired with negativity precisely because some mods abuse the system to mod down a meritorious post. They would have to think twice if they were required to mod something up 10 times before modding something down. In any case, I'm sure the metamods will ensure that the bad moderators will fade into oblivion in the long run, but the short term damage is done.

      --
      I once had a signature.
    2. Re:10 likes for 1 dislike by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In any case, I'm sure the metamods will ensure that the bad moderators will fade into oblivion in the long run, but the short term damage is done.

      Employees of Slashdot can overrule metamoderation and grant absurd amounts of modding power to themselves and their favorite idiots.

  19. Simple example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    George: I prefer Pepsi.
    Suzy: I prefer Coke.
    100 people who prefer Pepsi upvote George and downvote Suzy.
    100 people who prefer Coke upvote Suzy and downvote George.

    What if the ratio was 2:1? Ok, now it's just a popularity contest.

    Another system (the one in use now, as I understand) is that people who prefer Pepsi would be recommended to George's feed and people who prefer Coke would be recommended to Suzy's feed.

    What system is better?

    1. Re: Simple example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Charlie Sheen prefers Coke.

  20. not enough negativity on the internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    thank god facebook is doing their part

  21. What about users who aren't trolls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see this on Reddit all the time: Someone posts an impassioned brainless rant completely void of fact about something in a board where people tend to agree with them. A circle-jerk ensues and the poster gets plenty of upvotes. Anyone who dares question the poster or point out some logical fallacy gets downvoted into oblivion; sometimes even threatened or abused in private messages.

    1. Re:What about users who aren't trolls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see it on slashdot all the time. Look no farther than this site in abused downmoderating and all else you describe comes with it. The cheaters have many sockpuppet accounts to cheat the easily abused moderation system makes it so some of the cheats around here can make themselves feel good giving their own alterego fake account some upmods and those they dislike a downmod and usually when that someone they rampantly constantly downmod bomb simply got the better of them at some point triggering their fragile egos that have no basis for egotism as they are nothing more than pitiful losers trying to cheat to win some make believe popularity contest.

  22. Re:A SJW button by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could someone mod this 'funny'? I got a good laugh out of this.

    Wait, was that serious? You know Reddit (And Imgur) has a downvote option?

  23. This will backfire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guaranteed.

    When all the idiotic posts about climate change, how great the democrats are, or other lies get downvoted to hell Facebook will regret this decision.

  24. Be careful when you wish for symmetry! by shanen · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I actually think that each of the subjective dimensions should be symmetric (on Facebook and even here on Slashdot), but the playing field should still be tilted in favor of the positive side. You want to make it easier for people to do and be good. In a simple implementation, clicking "Like" can be easy, while clicking "Dislike" can involve an extra step to say why.

    However I think that Like-Dislike is basically a weak and almost meaningless dimension. In terms of meaning, I think you can argue that it should increase the general weight of a comment's positive ratings, but on its own there is little meaning to it. Therefore I think the better dimensions of sentiment should have clear meanings. Dimensions such as true-false (or informative-disinformative or valid-invalid) or funny-unfunny (to me). For example, if you say a comment is false, then you would have to indicate which part was false and why. (And if it turned out you are lying, then YOUR own reputation should suffer. More symmetry.)

    (Bells and whistles in dimensional thinking for sentiments: I also think the dimensions should be able to evolve over time, and that the dimensions of earned public reputation should age to encourage people to act better and see their reputations gradually improve. People with earned negative reputations should be easier to filter against, thus allowing them to be as negative as they like for the (negative) benefit of people who actually want to spend their time that way. Also, a person who has an earned reputation in a particular dimension should get extra weight, as with a rating from a proven funny person (based on reactions from other people) counting more heavily in rating another comment as funny or unfunny.)

    The clumsy, ad hoc, and poorly considered dimensions of Slashdot's moderation are an excellent example of how NOT to do it. Take that "troll" dimension, for example. (I wish someone would.) What is it supposed to mean? I think that the dimension may have a catchy label, but it lacks meaning. Some combination of "negative politeness" and "negative truth" combined with an earned reputation for "negative agreement"? (I think the general meaning on today's Slashdot is that a sock puppet has a mod point to burn, but that might be jealous projection since I never get a mod point.)

    --
    Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    1. Re:Be careful when you wish for symmetry! by Kjella · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The clumsy, ad hoc, and poorly considered dimensions of Slashdot's moderation are an excellent example of how NOT to do it. Take that "troll" dimension, for example. (I wish someone would.) What is it supposed to mean?

      Well, they boil down to +1 or -1 anyway so whether you use troll or flamebait or offtopic or overrated hardly matters. Those who tend to abuse it the most always pick overrated anyway. I think trolling is pretty well defined, but to each his own. Personally I'd probably just disconnect them and have mod points basically be "more people should see this" or "less people should see this" and have the rest be like a popular emotion-vote. It'd probably have to be a mix of descriptive - this post is informative / insightful / important / crazy / trolling / flamebait / crap and reactive - this post makes me feel happy / sad / angry / afraid / disgusted / surprised / excited etc. and actually I'm thinking maybe that is two dimensions.... a post can both be insightful and make me feel happy/angry/sad.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    2. Re:Be careful when you wish for symmetry! by dwpro · · Score: 1

      You make some good points there, but I disagree about the meaningless of troll. Back in the days of metamoderation, having specific labels for trolls was helpful. The burden of tracking down the context across threads would have gone from onerous to implausible without it.

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    3. Re:Be careful when you wish for symmetry! by shanen · · Score: 1

      I think you have some confusion about the dimensional topic. The dimensions should represent orthogonal aspects of the comments and the sentiments towards them. Also the dimensions should be symmetric with the people who made the comments.

      You raised another aspect with the scoring. I think it should be logarithmic with special handling for zero. I actually imagine it as a radar diagram with an axis for each dimension, but the axes are actually folded for positive and negative on each axis. Not sure if that's the best way to do it, but it's a starting point.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    4. Re:Be careful when you wish for symmetry! by shanen · · Score: 1

      I think it's too relativistic. Everyone draws the line differently, but in contrast I think it would be much easier to understand and agree on what a dimension like "polite" is and get meaningful ratings on that dimension. You might feel rudeness (AKA negative politeness) is really a major annoyance and want to weigh that dimension heavily, whereas I might prefer to grant more slack on that dimension (perhaps because I lack social grace).

      Maybe another example would be more helpful. What does "off topic" mean? I think it could be broken down and divided into dimensions of "novel" (versus "redundant") and "relevant" (versus "irrelevant"). I might favor novel more than you do, but we might feel the same about the relevancy aspect. The irrelevant rating is actually one of the ones where I think the person who is being criticized should get a chance to explain the relevance. Sometimes the relevance of the most thought-provoking comments is not clear.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
  25. Facebook is completely revolutionary by Prien715 · · Score: 1

    Slashdot had both negative and positive moderation since the 90's and it does work. The problem with Facebook's likes/dislikes/etc are that they ENTIRELY opaque in how they operate to anyone except the people who literally work in the "feed ordering" division at FB -- and even then, if you were to leave for even a week they could completely change it again and you'd have no idea how it works. Of course, if you are a paid propagandist, you probably have the most time

    If only someone could come up with a decentralized system for people to post content and users could decide how to order that content for themselves. Why we even need these companies whose chief "service" is data mining their customers is beyond me.

    --
    -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
  26. Re:A SJW button by AHuxley · · Score: 1

    Re "Using them to suppress controversy would be a silly move"
    Whats the point of having a SJW button if its only for that account?
    Say a user only likes their news from 4 US broadcasters and 3 US "digital" newspapers?
    Keep that filter list just for that one users account?
    So that user is never going to be able to search for, find, discover any other news?

    Make the filter global to the social media brand and ensure all users votes remove all non approved links, comments, images, reviews, transcripts, books, politics, music, cartoons, art?
    Say a US university funds an event and a "professor" says something that could get the US gov interested? Something about US politics, crypto, DRM, police methods?
    Can that university down vote all news of that event so it cant be searched, cant be linked to, the video now never existed and their own statement disavowing the video never exists?
    A memory hole https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... for that account? A memory hole for the brand of social media?
    Could a gov, university, approved faith group, NGO, political party request a SJW vote multiplier? So one approved staff member can remove all comments, links with their one vote?
    Do SJW get to link 3 or 4 big social media brands "votes" with a search engine monopoly and demand results, links and sites get deranked?
    Can one US political party step in and say all links, comments on some topics get removed (not just deranked) for security "reasons" and that the people "voted" with clicks?
    Can one SJW social media site then project its deranking onto another brands search results? Can a gov, brand, NGO, faith group take the dislike button "results" and demand sites, links, comments get removed?

    US freedom of speech and freedom after speech is looking rather less complex than having global SJW rules remove and ban content.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  27. Here's my idea for a Dislike button... by Millennium · · Score: 0

    Put a Dislike button ln all posts. Anyone who clicks it is banned for two weeks. There is no other effect.

    This will improve Facebook immensely, because the only people who would ever find any real use for a Dislike button are people who should not be on Facebook. Why not let them self-select for the banhammer?

  28. Meanwhile Disqus got rid of theirs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think FB is making the wrong move, per usual

  29. So Slashdot is not a relatively "large site"? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    What platforms even still allow down votes? Every relatively large site I have ever been on that had down voting ended up removing it.

    How about Slashdot?

    I currently have mod points and the menu still includes offtopic, flamebait, troll, redundant, and overrated.

    Does Slashdot no longer qualify as a "relatively large site"?

    I note that, at least, trolls and SJWs have a track record of using such moderation, in ways other than its stated purpose, to down-moderate posting of opinions with which they disagree. (This is not to say that people of other leanings don't misuse it in such a way. Just that these are the ones with which I have personal experience.)

    Want to test it? Try posting anything questioning a politically-correct paradigm, such as gun control or global warming, in an (on-topic) article near the top of the front page. Then check your score every few minutes for a couple hours.

    These down-mods do let some people try to turn Slashdot into an echo-chamber for their ideologies. But so far such efforts have not been totally successful. B-)

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re: So Slashdot is not a relatively "large site"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but you can't get -1,000 here can you?

      This is why YouTube turned off displaying the thumbs down number. Every comment has thousands of thumbs down for each week since it was posted.
      It's just not a useful metric.
      People thumbs down things just to be rude and you can't do anything about it except remove your comment.

    2. Re:So Slashdot is not a relatively "large site"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These down-mods do let some people try to turn Slashdot into an echo-chamber for their ideologies. But so far such efforts have not been totally successful. B-)

      The difference is that Slashdot lets a few people who are regular users of the site (you have to use the site a lot before you eventually get enough micro-point "tokens" to get mod), and you are limited to a very few (5 and sometimes 15) moderations over a three day period.

      With a site like Reddit, everyone, no matter how new, gets to vote on every post, with no limit. That's what makes Reddit such an echo chamber.

      I don't use Fakebook, but if I did, I'd hope that they make this only work on messages that they push in your face without asking you, and not on messages you seek out. But I can't imagine that they would do something so sane, when they probably get money for some of those pushed messages.

    3. Re:So Slashdot is not a relatively "large site"? by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      I think it's a case of (1) limited number of mod points, (2) mod points are awarded randomly and occasionally, and they expire after a few days if not used, so you can't count on having them, (3) You can not both mod and participate in a topic, and (4) meta-moderation, allowing occasional people to vote "fair/unfair" on moderations, hopefully to catch those who abuse it.

  30. Facebook is dead already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When bots can automatically mark your post as spam within seconds and there is no way to undo it... what's the point?

    In fact, Facebook is becoming like Twitter in 2016, mostly bot spam

  31. YouTube has had dislike buttons forever by qzzpjs · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And I haven't really seen any bad abuse there. The dislikes are usually very small compared to likes. I actually dislike social media sites that only expect you to like everything.

    1. Re:YouTube has had dislike buttons forever by eaglesrule · · Score: 1

      One of the more interesting uses of a dislike button has been for Youtube CEO Susan Wojcicki's own first video. While I expect that the count was frozen after it hit a 10:1 ratio, the message from viewers was clear.

      Usually the videos with that ratio of dislikes is just clickbait.

  32. Yeah... by zoid.com · · Score: 1

    I Dislike Facebook...

  33. Protesting too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What kind of lives are people living, when their first reaction to the idea of a "downvote" button is that armies of paid social-media assassins are going to downvote everything they post? Sounds paranoid, and more than a little egotistical.

    Disallowing disagreement doesn't eliminate negativity, it just suppresses it. And downvoting doesn't need to result in automated bans, it can just be cosmetic, for purposes of communication between human beings. Which is supposed to be the whole purpose of social media to begin with.

  34. Good Thing Trump Hangs out on Twitter by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

    I don't think his ego could handle too many dislikes.

  35. Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This may bring me back to Facebook so I can downvote all the pissant snowflakes who thinks that Nibber-Obama was the end-all-be-all of the world and only want to make America a fourth world cunthole.

  36. Mathematically impossible! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can never have too much negativity. There is always a more negative number. So the partition of negativity would be infinitesimally small.

  37. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been watching, for years, the "you can only say positive things" behavior on Facebook. It's the cult of the millennials, where everyone gets a "participation award" rather than seeing awards only for accomplishment.

    Unfortunately, I don't see how it could possibly be done. It *will* leave the addicted children feeling "unempowered", and it's going to trigger snowflakes. That will drive down advertising and data collection revenues. Unless there is some subtle fiscal benefit I can't see, ain't gtonna happen.

  38. dont votes retarded by strstr · · Score: 0

    down votes aren't worth shit because it's well known the platform harbors many mentally deficient people. when they don't care or get things, they tend to go around trolling, and abusing others with negative comments. even if something is true for example, it gets downvoted here on Slashdot for example. it could be the most classified government information, or industry insider thing, but because the "sheep" here don't get it or agree even if it's the fact they "downmod."

    come the fuck on. the internet is a joke show. keep the farce shit off facebook we don't need a downvote option.

    https://www.obamasweapon.com/

    1. Re:dont votes retarded by strstr · · Score: 0

      at least with the up vote only option, it gives people a chance to get the upvotes they get from the smarter and more insightful of the group, while the negative mentally ill/defective people/misinformed/hateful/trollish can't "downvote."

      by the way yes in fact I friend quite a few strangers as I'm a celebrity but I know within my click there are smart educated whistleblower types willing to talk about government crimes, and a hell lot of government trolls and abusers who will come by and post negative things to discredit me. there's also misinformed sheep who occasionally attack me. I stay low key otherwise and do get a lot of upvotes/likes ie 10+ likes/shares/etc, but with the added features to down vote me, my enemies outnumber me and could ruin my numbers and because I'm anticensorship I wouldn't de-friend them or block them for doing it.

      I prefer getting rid of the downvote option entirely as it's usually just ripe for abuse rather than performing any actual function.

  39. Without a negative consequence, it's GIFT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Link it to a reputation system, something like Slashdot's Karma.

    Reputation below one threshold prohibits use of 'Dislike'. Reputation increases with 'Likes' but decreases only with use of 'Dislike' (stops griefing beyond the social impact). Value 'Likes' logarithmically, such that it's reasonably easy to get back to a reputation where you can use 'Dislike' but progressively harder (to a second threshold and an absolute reputation cap) beyond that. Count only 'Likes' from unique users per week (to stop boosting a friend by spamming 'Like') with subsequent likes reducing in value and increasing the duration before they count full again. The reputation decrease from a 'Dislike' should be greater than increase for a 'like' (even below the first threshold) and maybe making each subsequent 'Dislike' cost exponentially more and increases the duration before that resets. Play with the value curves to change the sweet spot

    But so long as 'Disliking' a post has no consequences to the user, then it's just going to be another example of the Greater Internet Fuckwad Theory

  40. What I want is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I REALLY want is a "Fuck off" button for all their "suggested groups", "play this game" spam, etc etc etc etc.

  41. I dislike Facebook by nospam007 · · Score: 1

    Where is this button?
    I want to press it.

  42. Some technological breakthrough, finally! by aglider · · Score: 1

    This is why we all love the great work they do at Facebook!

    --
    Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
  43. Will it get you killed? by knorthern+knight · · Score: 1

    People have been killed http://www.businessinsider.com... or had their house set on fire https://www.aol.com/2011/11/03... for unfriending somebody. Dislike at your own risk.

    --

    I'm not repeating myself
    I'm an X window user; I'm an ex-Windows user
  44. Double meaning by pauljlucas · · Score: 1
    A Dislike buttton has two possible meanings:
    1. I dislike the truth your post highlights.
    2. I dislike your post because it disagrees with my world view.

    For example, if someone posts "Climate change is a serious threat," I could dislike it because either:

    1. I dislike the fact that climate change is real and is a serious threat.
    2. I dislike your post because I disagree with the whole notion of climate change.

    People will use Dislike for both. Note that the existing Angry emoji option has the same problem. Also note that Like doesn't have the problem.

    --
    If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
  45. It already exists by mlawrence · · Score: 3, Funny

    I have been using the "Angry" or "Laughter" reaction when I disagree with something.

  46. From the Innovators of the Like Button... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the next great new innovation since the tweet.... you'll remember this moment in history.... tell your grandchildren... when facebook invented the dislike button!

  47. Re:Eat my boners! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you aren't going to post a video of you using your boners to fly, I don't want to hear about them.

  48. In a world where everyone's a winner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can Facebook do this? In a world where we cannot tell someone we dislike something. OMG. I'm testing a dislike button for Facebook, its called a delete account button. Facebook has become nothing but the social police with a splash of annoying advertisements. Shouldn't have to test a dislike option. We should have the ability already.

  49. Don't show the dislikes by skovnymfe · · Score: 1

    Don't show the dislikes. Keep it internal to the system. Just make disliked things disappear.

    1. Re:Don't show the dislikes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would kill their revenue system, since everyone would 'dislike' the paid ads.

  50. Great by kurkosdr · · Score: 2

    Great, that's what Facebook needs. A neckband patrol downvoting anything it finds mildly offensive, like the one we have here in Slashdot

  51. I don't..... by MerlTurkin · · Score: 1

    ...do Facebook.

  52. I don't want a thumbs-down button by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    What I want is an eyeroll button. They've already got laughter, which you can use to laugh at people. I want an eye roll, which doesn't even dignify their idiotic comment with a laugh. I would settle for side eye.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  53. Re:Eat my boners! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  54. My solution for this by houghi · · Score: 2

    Using bind

    zone "appspot.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "cdninstagram.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "edgesuite.net" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "facebook.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "facebook.net" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "fbcdn.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "fbcdn.net" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "fb.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "fb.me" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "fbsbx.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "instagram.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "online-metrix.net" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "tfbnw.net" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };
    zone "whatsapp.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/spam2.hosts"; };

    Works wonders.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  55. Bimodal preference distributions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would be suppressed. I don't think this is going to work itself out peacefully.

  56. I want a "This shit is too old" button by InvalidsYnc · · Score: 2

    I have some family members that seem to be dragging the dregs of some site and pull up crap that is months and years old, as if it is relevant now. Would really like a way of showing my dislike for that old crap. I want NEW crap! If it's not warm, why bother! (Yes, there is some sarcasm here, but there is also the bitter truth that this does happen all the time)

  57. Re:This is imbecilic by thomst · · Score: 2

    Opportunist snorted:

    You think? How many people will "friend" celebrities for the sole purpose of downvoting them, if only to see the fans go bananas.

    Your comments - not just this one, but all of them - on this topic reveal your foundational ignorance of how "friendship" works on FB. Or, to put it another way, you're clearly talking out your ass here.

    To begin with, FB limits everyone to a maximum of 5,000 "friends". For users who are actually celebrities, that's a pretty small number. In order to add a new "friend", a celebrity who already has 5,000 must first de-friend one of those users to open up a slot.

    In practice, that never happens, unless the wannabe is someone they know, like, and are already actual friends with IRL - such as, for instance, another celebrity. (And, since the person who monitors their feed is almost undoubtedly a personal assistant, rather than the celeb him/herself, the add is usually arranged by personal assistants, rather than by the user him/herself, anyway.)

    The relationship the vast majority of FB users have with celebrities they love (or hate) is as "followers", which is quite a different and less privileged status.

    And then there's the matter of "blocking" FB users (which is trivially easy to do). Blocking a user removes them from your view, and prevents them from seeing any of your posts. Act like an asshole often enough (and just how often "often enough" is is purely a matter of choice on the part of the person you've set out to annoy), and your trolling ass will be blocked. The user you're trying to harass promptly becomes invisible to you, and anything and everything you've posted disappears from his/her view, as well.

    So, no, the scenario you find so amusing to contemplate will, in practice, never, ever happen ...

    --
    Check out my novel.
  58. innovation! by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    How exciting watching the great innovations of the 21st century unfold before our eyes.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  59. R.I.P. digg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unlimited downvotes (without karma) is what killed Digg. Unless Facebook is willing to charge a few cents for each downvote we're only going to see more and more divisive behavior from users. Expect another downvote militia trying to push their weird political agenda.

  60. And so came the need for Dislike Crime Legislation by Dirk+Becher · · Score: 2

    And dislike speech.
    Dislikers gonna dislike.
    New Tarantino Film: The Dislikeful Eight.
    Oh, and Marvel has a new villain now: The Dislikemonger.

  61. Needs a "Don't Care" button. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://i.imgur.com/LGNhVWP.gif

  62. I want a "Never show me anything like this" button by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

    On Facebook, a lot of times, I don't want to "mod the post down". I just want this post, and any post like it, to be gone from my newsfeed.

    I've got Facebook friends across the political spectrum. Some I want to see their personal posts, but I don't want to see anything political from either the ones with Antifa leanings, or the hard-core Trumpunists.

    If I could say "Never show me anything from (these people) which mentions Trump", I'd be much happier with Facebook. (Well, somewhat less disgusted with it, anyway.)

  63. Black Mirror here we come by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That episode of Black Mirror could become reality?

  64. Facebook? by philmarcracken · · Score: 1

    Well I guess that leaves something for the handful of remaining mothers and elderly that still use facebook.