As the 2024 U.S. election nears, social media platforms are trying to avoid repeating their past mistakes: egregious missteps that helped spread misinformationand disinformation and fueled political ireand divide.
As a result of years of scrutiny over how these platforms handle political disinformation and and extremism, many have created a whole host of rules and regulations regarding political content on their sites. In November, for instance, Meta saidit would force political advertisers to disclose when a Facebookor Instagramad has been "digitally created or altered, including through the use of AI."
More recently, on Friday, Instagram and Threads saidin a blog post that it would no longer "proactively recommend political content from accounts you don’t follow." The post acknowledges that users can still follow accounts that post political content and, if they still want to see political content in their recommendations, they'll be able to manage that in a future rollout.
"These recommendations updates apply to public accounts and in places where we recommend content such as Explore, Reels, In-Feed Recommendations and Suggested Users – it doesn’t change how we show people content from accounts they choose to follow," the social media giant wrote in a blog post. "If political content – potentially related to things like laws, elections, or social topics – is posted by an account that is not eligible to be recommended, that account’s content can still reach their followers in Feed and Stories."
In a post on Threadsdetailing the change, Instagram Head Adam Mosseri said that the platform's "goal is to preserve the ability for people to choose to interact with political content, while respecting each person’s appetite for it." The changes will be rolling out slowly.
It shouldn't come as a huge surprise that Meta'sresponse to its impact on the political world is to attempt to make political posts less easily available, instead of arming the site with more content moderation. When Threads was first launched as a rival to X, Mosseri said that while "politics and hard news are inevitably going to show up on Threads," the platform will not "do anything to encourage those verticals."
It's clear that Meta is focusing on creators and viral moments over news and political content.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Instagram, Threads to stop recommending some political content-雷电交加网
sitemap
文章
5841
浏览
2686
获赞
79733
The new specialty Reese's cups are perfect for the nuanced Reese's palate
The only good news is candy news, so it's wonderful that two new Reese's cups will hit shelves soon.Desperate Chinese Pokémon trainers are buying Australian and US App Store accounts on Taobao
What's a keen Pokémon trainer to do in a country that hasn't yet been granted access to Pok&eHow to reset your Apple ID password
Buddy, we've all been there before. I cannot tell you how many times I've forgotten a password &mdasMischa Barton responds to Alton Sterling's death with...a yacht Instagram?
Like many Americans, Mischa Barton is horrified that unarmed black men continue to be shot dead by tThis alignment test will tell you if you're a stupid horny baby
People online love a good alignment test. They also love to say "I'm baby." Here's something that coTikTok takes on U.S. Senators and billionaires as ban looms
Roiling uncertainty about TikTok's future and the powers of the federal government make this a vulneMTV News, BET News to host live town hall to discuss 'America in crisis'
In wake of the recent shootings, MTV News and BET News announced they will hold a town hall Friday tDon't worry, this tiny dog is not mad at you, human
There, there, human.An adorable chihuahua named Princess Buttercup may get a little moody sometimes,Tumblr loses nearly 30 percent of its page views after banning porn
Tumblr has suffered a massive drop in traffic since banning porn late last year.In November 2018, TuTikTok takes on U.S. Senators and billionaires as ban looms
Roiling uncertainty about TikTok's future and the powers of the federal government make this a vulneI’ve been forcibly blue
If you've been on X, the Elon Musk-owned platform formerly known as Twitter, over the past day or soAftermath of apparent police shooting broadcast on Facebook Live
A police officer in Minnesota apparently opened fire on a black man during a traffic stop on WednesdFacebook criticized by Free Press for empty PR response to ad boycott
In the face of mounting advertiser pressure over its handling of hate speech, Mark Zuckerberg today2024 iPad Air hands
After feasting my eyes on the thinnest-ever iPad Pro, which drew me in with its vivid, color-rich, uReenacting 'The Lion King' is a grueling, integral part of Michigan's offseason
These guys just can't wait to be king. But they probably also can't wait for their season to start.S