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Meta to ditch human-curated Facebook New

$40/hr Starting at $50

Some three years after first introducing a curated news section for publishers, Meta has confirmed that it’s ditching the humans and leaning entirely on algorithms for Facebook News in all markets where it’s available

Meta, then known simply as Facebook, first introduced Facebook News back in 2019, kicking off initially to a small subset of users in the U.S. before eventually expanding nationwide and into international markets starting with the U.K. then Germany, Australia, and France.

Facebook News, essentially, is a dedicated tab inside Facebook that surfaces notable local and international news relevant to each market, and although most of the surfaced articles were already determined algorithmically, there was a “top stories” section curated by humans.

Soon, this section will also be determined by algorithms.

As per a report in U.K. trade publication Press Gazette today, Meta is ending a contract it had with Axel Springer-owned Upday, which provided the freelance workforce that powered news curation in the U.K. market, albeit with heavy direction from the powers-that-be at Meta. As an aside, this followed shortly after a negative report from Press Gazette detailing some of the working conditions the freelancers had to contend with

The changes will come into effect in the U.K. some time in early 2023. However, a Meta spokesperson confirmed to TechCrunch that it will in fact be ending human-curated stories in all markets where Facebook News operates.

“We are always evaluating our global curation partnerships based on user and product needs,” a Meta spokesperson said in a stock statement.

As noted by Press Gazette, Upday originally curated the German news tab, but due to conflict-of-interest concerns owing to parent company Axel Springer’s association with the news industry, Meta gave the curation contract to a local press agency called the Deutschen Presse-Agentur (DPA) earlier this year. But in the wake of this latest news from Meta, it seems the DPA’s role in curating the top stories in Facebook News will be limited to the duration of its remaining contract.


Bad news

While news-sharing has been a cornerstone of the Facebook platform almost since its inception, it’s clear the company has been making moves to deprioritise this aspect of the social network in favor of the so-called creator economy. Part of this has also involved renaming the trusty ol’ news feed simply as “feed.”

But this shift has been driven, perhaps, by a broader industrial pushback that has led to new legislation in countries such as Australia which now stipulate that online platforms such as Facebook compensate publishers for their content. Similar mandates are working their way toward fruition in other markets too, including the U.S.

While Meta is seemingly reducing its investment in news — from a human perspective, at least — there is no indication that Facebook News itself is going the way of the dodo any time soon. Though that is one potential outcome here, given the company claims that creator-driven content is what its users are most interested in — both on Facebook and on Instagram.


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Some three years after first introducing a curated news section for publishers, Meta has confirmed that it’s ditching the humans and leaning entirely on algorithms for Facebook News in all markets where it’s available

Meta, then known simply as Facebook, first introduced Facebook News back in 2019, kicking off initially to a small subset of users in the U.S. before eventually expanding nationwide and into international markets starting with the U.K. then Germany, Australia, and France.

Facebook News, essentially, is a dedicated tab inside Facebook that surfaces notable local and international news relevant to each market, and although most of the surfaced articles were already determined algorithmically, there was a “top stories” section curated by humans.

Soon, this section will also be determined by algorithms.

As per a report in U.K. trade publication Press Gazette today, Meta is ending a contract it had with Axel Springer-owned Upday, which provided the freelance workforce that powered news curation in the U.K. market, albeit with heavy direction from the powers-that-be at Meta. As an aside, this followed shortly after a negative report from Press Gazette detailing some of the working conditions the freelancers had to contend with

The changes will come into effect in the U.K. some time in early 2023. However, a Meta spokesperson confirmed to TechCrunch that it will in fact be ending human-curated stories in all markets where Facebook News operates.

“We are always evaluating our global curation partnerships based on user and product needs,” a Meta spokesperson said in a stock statement.

As noted by Press Gazette, Upday originally curated the German news tab, but due to conflict-of-interest concerns owing to parent company Axel Springer’s association with the news industry, Meta gave the curation contract to a local press agency called the Deutschen Presse-Agentur (DPA) earlier this year. But in the wake of this latest news from Meta, it seems the DPA’s role in curating the top stories in Facebook News will be limited to the duration of its remaining contract.


Bad news

While news-sharing has been a cornerstone of the Facebook platform almost since its inception, it’s clear the company has been making moves to deprioritise this aspect of the social network in favor of the so-called creator economy. Part of this has also involved renaming the trusty ol’ news feed simply as “feed.”

But this shift has been driven, perhaps, by a broader industrial pushback that has led to new legislation in countries such as Australia which now stipulate that online platforms such as Facebook compensate publishers for their content. Similar mandates are working their way toward fruition in other markets too, including the U.S.

While Meta is seemingly reducing its investment in news — from a human perspective, at least — there is no indication that Facebook News itself is going the way of the dodo any time soon. Though that is one potential outcome here, given the company claims that creator-driven content is what its users are most interested in — both on Facebook and on Instagram.


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AlgorithmsArticle EditingArticle WritingArts WritingBlog WritingBusiness JournalismCitationsContent CurationContent WritingContractsDirectorEditorial WritingFacebook AdsFact CheckingFeature WritingHow to ArticlesIndustrial DesignInvestigative ReportingJournalismJournalistic WritingLifestyle WritingNews WritingNewslettersNewspaperPublishing

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