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  • Facebook said Thursday it would emphasize user feedback when prioritizing posts on the leading social network, the latest move to quell concerns over its algorithms. The California giant said it would add weight to surveys asking users if certain messages are "worth your time" as part of its ranking process for its main news feeds. "Our algorithm uses thousands of signals to rank posts for your News Feed with this goal in mind," said a blog post from Aastha Gupta, Facebook product management director. "This spring, we're expanding on our work to use direct feedback from people who use Facebook to understand the content people find most valuable. And we'll continue to incorporate this feedback into our News Feed ranking process." The move comes with Facebook and other online platforms under pressure over opaque algorithms which determine what users see at the top of their feeds. Critics say these systems may be geared to highlight sensational or divisive content, aiming to keep users engaged to boost monetization. Facebook in recent months has been de-emphasizing political content which tends to be more polarizing and moving to give users more control over their feeds. In March, Facebook unveiled a change to give users more control over their News Feed and even to turn off the Facebook algorithm entirely and see posts in chronological order. The latest tweak aims to use the surveys asking "Is this post worth your time?" to prioritize content in Facebook's ranking algorithm. "While a post's engagement -- or how often people like it, comment on it, or share it -- can be a helpful indicator... this survey-driven approach, which largely occurs outside the immediate reaction to a post, gives a more complete picture of the types of posts people find most valuable," said Gupta. "Now we're building on these surveys by asking new questions about the content people find valuable as well as the content people don't enjoy seeing in their News Feed." Facebook's move away from divisive political content gained momentum after the January 6 Capitol riot which was organized in part on social media. After an internal review, Facebook acknowledged that it failed to do enough to prevent the circulation of the #StopTheSteal movement that led to the violence. "We took a number of steps to limit content that sought to delegitimize the election," a Facebook spokesperson said after a BuzzFeed report on the review. "As we've said previously, we still saw problematic content on our platform during this period and we know that we didn't catch everything." bur-rl/ft
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  • Facebook wants users' responses to improve feeds
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