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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/2022\/8\/17\/23309770\/future-of-facebook-feed-discovery-engine-land-of-the-giants-podcast<\/a> Facebook was once, believe it or not, cool.<\/p>\n But a lot has changed since the early days of News Feed, when it was full of status updates and photos from friends. Facebook has gotten crowded with brands and pages vying for eyeballs. It has become a place where people, especially teenagers and young adults, don\u2019t feel as comfortable sharing their lives. <\/p>\n Now, after spending the past four years trying to fix the News Feed by making it more about friends and family, Facebook is going in the other direction: toward showing you more entertaining content from people you don\u2019t know. This new \u201cDiscovery Engine\u201d push is all about becoming more like TikTok, which has captured the attention of the young generation Facebook so desperately wants to win back.<\/p>\n The result is an \u201cupdated vision for how the Facebook app is going to respond to the next generation of people who are going to use it,\u201d says Tom Alison, the head of the Facebook app at Meta, in what marks his first in-depth podcast interview since he assumed the role in July 2021.<\/p>\n We examine the past, present, and future of Facebook\u2019s Feed for our fifth episode of the new season of Land of the Giants<\/em>, Vox Media Podcast Network\u2019s award-winning narrative podcast series about the most influential tech companies of our time. This season, Recode<\/em> and The Verge<\/em> have teamed up over the course of seven episodes to tell the story of Facebook\u2019s journey to becoming Meta, featuring interviews with current and former executives.<\/p>\n This episode also features commentary from Nick Clegg, Meta\u2019s top policy executive, about the implications of the company taking more control over what billions of users see every day in their Facebook and Instagram feeds. <\/p>\n \u201cIn a strange kind of way, in the future, we\u2019re going to be doing what we have been alleged to do for a long time,\u201d said Clegg. \u201cIf you listen to the [former Facebook employee and whistleblower] Frances Haugen kind of narrative… it\u2019s, \u2018oh my gosh, they\u2019re just spoon-feeding people hate speech\u2026\u2019 Of course it was nonsense\u2026 Because the vast majority of content that people saw on Facebook was driven, of course, by our systems, but also by their own choices, who their friends are, which groups they\u2019re part of, what content they engage with, and so on.\u201d <\/p>\n But that is changing with the new Discovery Engine strategy. To make Facebook and Instagram more like TikTok, Meta will serve users more content from strangers using AI. What will this push mean for the future of Facebook and how we use it?<\/p>\n Listen to the fifth episode of Land of the Giants: The Facebook \/ Meta Disruption<\/em> below, and catch the first four episodes on Apple Podcasts<\/a>, Google Podcasts<\/a>, Spotify<\/a>, or wherever you get your podcasts.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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