Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is seen on stage during a town hall at Facebook's headquarters in Menlo Park, California September 27, 2015 / REUTERS/Stephen Lam
The social network said it wants to make people's news feed more 'informative'
Facebook
is due to start hiding posts from people who spam users' news feed with click
bait, sensationalized and misinformative articles.
In a statement,
the social media giant said it was making the update "to reduce low
quality links" in users' news feed.
Facebook
said it carried out research which showed that a small group of users were
"routinely sharing vast amounts of public posts per day", which was
effectively spamming people's feeds.
The study showed that the same people, who were sharing vast
amounts of public posts, were also sharing low quality content.
As a
result of the research, Facebook said it would "deprioritise" posts
being shared from those accounts.
The new
policy will only apply to links for individual articles and domains
- pages, videos, photos, check-ins or status updates will not be
affected.
Facebook
said it aimed to make people's news feed more "informative".
It
said: "By taking steps like this to improve news feed, we’re able to surface
more stories that people find informative and reduce the spread of problematic
links such as clickbait, sensationalism and misinformation."
Meanwhile, Facebook is also
reported to be rolling out a new Discover tab for Messenger that will make it easier
for users to find and engage with brands and chatbots, Business Insider reports.
The
tool, which was unveiled during a Facebook conference in April,
is part of the company's strategy to make Messenger go-to communication
platforms between users and businesses.
The
social network said it wants to make the app more like the Yellow Pages and
make it easier for users to get in touch with businesses.
While
users will be able to use the Discover tab to "find the businesses they
care about", this will also mean businesses will also be able to pester
users more easily.
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