Facebook broke, he says singer Frances Haugen, who worked for a civicity company. Testifying before Congress and the media, Haugen also said that the change contributes to the problems that stem from youth violence to racial violence in Ethiopia. There is no answer to that fix all that is wrong with Facebookno, even a new nameBut one of Haugen’s principles was obvious.
“I’m a strong advocate for timing, calling for time and minimizing spam,” he told the Senate earlier this month. “We need to have well-known programs, where people communicate together, not computers that help us hear.”
Just think! … People… talking… together. Haugen strongly recommends Facebook News Feed when things look like people post them, instead of following the system shared by the company’s wizardry. In this country, likes and comments do not dictate what you see. It’s all a matter of timing – which could also prevent algorithms from dropping logs on platforms that cause severe inflammation.
It is not such a serious thought. Instagram only provides algorithm strings for your food in 2016. Twitter dropped all year round the same year, just bring back as a way in 2018. And you can also leave algorithms in the Facebook News Feed right now, today. I know, because I’ve been doing it for the past two weeks.
Honestly, it’s not like Facebook hides the way. On the desktop, you just click Recent on the left side. On a mobile phone, you’ll find the latest version under the hamburger menu in the far right corner. As Facebook itself warns, however, the incident is temporary. “You can diversify your News feed to view recent posts,” the company’s support page says, “but the News feed will eventually return to its original position.” (Or you can use this link instead of facebook dot com, I carry meaningless experiences every time.)
To get me off track: I am not a Facebook user. I have submitted three or four times a year since 2019, all of which were WIRED stories or attempts to start a Girl Scout girl business. My account is private, and when I am a member of 14 groups, more than half of whom did not post anything last year, I only look at the three, forgetting that everyone else was there. However, any real statistics can put me on Facebook several times a week. Call it the habit, call it Market voyeurism. Regardless, I know how News Feed works – and I was impressed with the diversity and timing of counting.
I don’t want to exaggerate anymore. The evils that Haugen wants to count the time it can fix are not found in my social media books to begin with, which I have seen. Facebook also uses many algorithms; here is just a list of News Feed platforms. And I hesitate to say if what happened is better, for me, than what Facebook has here. Interestingly, that’s what it says about Facebook itself.
I have 975 Facebook friends, whom I met 13 years ago. I like the 15 “pages”, a list that only has a store, plus a few friends who changed their history into Pages, and Cheez-Its, for some reason. (The reason is that Cheez-Its is delicious.)
You may think that on a good social networking site, even over time, the sheer number of posts from your friends to their brand can reflect your stance. You don’t even have to think, really; as a result of how Twitter works like this, it’s a bump and a day-long walk that reflects the real-life experiences of the people you follow.