Facebook this week started testing a
system that lets users pay to promote their posts. Out of all the various
different features the social networking giant has trialed on its website, this
idea is by far the worst one yet. It sounds like an April Fools’ joke, but it
isn’t.
“We’re constantly testing new
features across the site,” a Facebook spokesperson said in a statement. “This
particular test is simply to gauge people’s interest in this method of sharing
with their friends.”
The tests are being carried out in New Zealand, a popular Facebook choice for testing something before a broader rollout.
I’m hoping the tests don’t go well, and Facebook users make it clear to the
company they don’t want to pay to highlight their stories.
Your typical News Feed story reaches
just 12 percent of your friends. That’s just the average: a story can become
less or more popular depending on various metrics used by the News Feed
algorithm.
That’s the beauty of it: my Facebook
friends get to decide if my latest status update is important enough for other
Facebook friends to see. If I post something boring, it doesn’t get promoted as
much because fewer people Like it, comment on it, and so on. If I post
something interesting, more people engage with it, and thus more people get to
see it.
Highlight would destroy that. As you
can see in the screenshot above, courtesy of Stuff, the potential new feature lets you pay a small fee to
ensure that your story is visible to more of your Facebook friends.
Paid post promotion already exists on
Facebook. It’s called advertising. That’s what Facebook Pages are for, not
Facebook profiles.
Earlier this year, Facebook started pushing “Featured” ads in the News Feed. Here
is the official description of Featured Stories from the Facebook Help Center:
Source:zdnet.com
Source:zdnet.com
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