百科

【】

字号+作者:囫圇吞棗網来源:焦點2024-11-25 06:25:07我要评论(0)

Facebook is really hoping it will all go better this time around. The company that keeps insisting i

Facebook is really hoping it will all go better this time around.

The company that keeps insisting it's not in the media business intends to launch a news tab in the coming months, and appears keen on staving off another Trending topics-style fiasco. Part of this effort, it would seem, involves establishing editorial guidelines — enforced by actual humans — for the articles populating its upcoming section.

In other words, employees of Mark "I consider us to be a technology company" Zuckerberg's Facebook will be to some extent curating what news people read on the site. And, with the depressing fact that, as of last year, approximately 43 percent of Americans get their news on Facebook, we're talking about a lot of people.

The Information got its hands on some of the editorial criteria presented to Facebook's recently hired "news curators" (i.e. editors), and the collection of standards is enough to make the average person wonder why the company didn't try this before.

For starters, the predictably square: Facebook won't allow headlines that feature profanity, which we can all agree is absolute bullshit. Yet it's not alluptight. The company will allow news stories calling out Facebook's repeated ethical and technical failings to appear in the news tab section.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

In other words, Facebook is explicitly telling its news curators not to censor stories critical of their employer. It's not clear if any such direction was given to the independent contractors working on its Trending topics team.

So hey, at least there's that.

Other interesting tidbits, which The Information reports as coming from an internal Facebook memo, include the fact that Facebook editors will wait until two "whitelisted media outlets" have reported a breaking story based on an "unsubstantiated report" before the story is included in the section. Facebooks news curators will also avoid news articles "constructed to provoke, divide, and polarize."

What that means, and who decides what that means, remains unclear.

SEE ALSO:Facebook let contractors listen to audio recordings from users

The Information also notes that Facebook's news curators will prioritize both local news outlets and "stories with on-the-record sources rather than anonymous sources."

How this all will actually shake out in practice is anyone's guess, but with each additional internal memorandum issued and "news curator" hired Facebook gets yet another undeniable step closer to the thing it fears the most: accountability.

If the past is any indication, we should know pretty quickly whether that blows up in our faces.


Featured Video For You
Blocked and deleted: How to officially delete your Facebook account

TopicsFacebook

1.本站遵循行业规范,任何转载的稿件都会明确标注作者和来源;2.本站的原创文章,请转载时务必注明文章作者和来源,不尊重原创的行为我们将追究责任;3.作者投稿可能会经我们编辑修改或补充。

相关文章
  • Teacher absolutely nails it with new homework policy

    Teacher absolutely nails it with new homework policy

    2024-11-25 05:54

  • 曝天津津門虎正在複活中 體育局托管打造升級版天海模式

    曝天津津門虎正在複活中 體育局托管打造升級版天海模式

    2024-11-25 05:26

  • 某國資背景中甲隊董事長開天價年薪 球隊已無望準入

    某國資背景中甲隊董事長開天價年薪 球隊已無望準入

    2024-11-25 05:21

  • 看濕了!貝爾與隊友連續一腳撞牆 手術刀直塞喂餅

    看濕了!貝爾與隊友連續一腳撞牆 手術刀直塞喂餅

    2024-11-25 03:49

网友点评