Social Media

Tech Tip – How To Put YouTube Videos on Automatic Repeat

If you’d like to put a YouTube video on repeat play e.g. because you want to watch or show a work / instructional video, or even listen to your favourite music on a loop while working on your laptop, there are two easy ways to do it.  Here’s how:

Go to YouTube.com and navigate to your chosen video.

Method 1

Put the mouse over the video or the play button, right-mouse click, and select the ‘Loop’ option from the drop-down list

Method 2

Go to URL of the video you’re watching e.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECVz610Rkns

Remove the https://www part.

Type the word ‘repeat’ after the word ‘youtube’ in what’s left of the URL e.g. youtuberepeat.com/watch?v=ECVz610Rkns

Hit the enter button, you will be re-directed to the listenonrepeat.com website, and your chosen video should now repeat until the page is closed.

ROI Index Shows That Facebook & Google Offer Best Value For Mobile Advertisers

Marketing report company Singular has produced an ROI index for mobile advertising, based on its own research which shows that Facebook and Google appear to offer the best value for mobile advertisers.

The Research

Singular sampled over $1.5 billion of spend in mobile advertising, including over a half a billion installs and almost $3 billion in revenue.  From this, the company was able to produce an ‘ROI Index’ that ranks the best-performing ad networks for mobile marketers on iOS and Android globally.

Singular’s backers include Norwest Venture Partners, General Catalyst, Thomvest Ventures, and Method Capital, and Singular’s customers (as a marketing intelligence platform) include companies like Airbnb, LinkedIn, Symantec, and Twitter.

Facebook & Google – Best Value

Given the popularity and scale of Google and Facebook, and the economies thereof, and the fact that they can deliver results, it is perhaps not surprising that Singular’s ROI Index put Facebook and Google at the top for delivering the best return on investment.

The Index showed that Facebook won the global rankings, but Google came top in all three key regional rankings: EMEA, APAC, and Americas.

Ad Fraud Levels Also Taken Into Account

Singular’s ROI Index also considered advertising fraud levels, and it has been reported that a record number of 15 companies were deleted from its rankings this time around because of “excessive” fraud.

Snap No.3

The Index shows Snap (the advertising network for Snapchat) improving its rankings on most of the lists, and it is now the No. 3 network for non-gaming ads on both iOS and Android.

Other Findings

The ROI Index also showed other important results for:

  • Japan-based mobile messaging service LINE (700M users), ranked three times.
  • Twitter, which showed a resurgence with 11 rankings on global, regional, and platform-specific charts. These included second on iOS for retention: providing users/customers who stay engaged.
  • Unity, the games ad network, ranking third on Android and fourth on iOS globally.
  • BlueStacks, the US technology company that produces the BlueStacks App Player and other cloud-based cross-platform products, is delivering significant ROI on its own on-platform ad network.

Android More Volatile

Singular’s ROI Index also shows that one-third of the global Android index is brand-new compared to only two new networks joining the corresponding iOS index.  This indicates that the Android ad ecosystem is more volatile than iOS.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

With all of us now using mobiles for our personal and business lives, mobile advertising has become a very important way for businesses to reach customers.  Google and Facebook are widely known among marketers, but many marketers now know they need to consider using more than just two media partners in order to get the most value out of their advertising budgets.

In an increasingly complicated and segmented media marketplace an ROI Index such as the one produced by Singular can provide valuable marketing intelligence, perhaps provide new ideas for promising ad networks to try, and can give businesses a way to get some measurement of ROI from different touchpoints across multiple channels that can help guide ad spend in order to produce the best value results.

Fake News Fact Checkers Working With Facebook

London-based, registered charity ‘Full Fact’ will now be working for Facebook, reviewing stories, images and videos, in an attempt to tackle misinformation that could “damage people’s health or safety or undermine democratic processes”.

Why?

The UK Brexit referendum, the 2017 UK general election, and the U.S. presidential election were both found to have suffered interference in the form of so-called ‘fake news’ / misinformation spread via Facebook which appears to have affected the outcomes by influencing voters.

For example, back in 2018, it was revealed that London-based data analytics company, Cambridge Analytica, which was once headed by Trump’s key adviser Steve Bannon, had illegally harvested 50 million Facebook profiles in early 2014 in order to build a software program that was used to predict and generate personalised political adverts to influence choices at the ballot box in the last U.S. election. Russia was also implicated in trying to influence voters via Facebook.

Chief executive of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, was made to appear before the U.S. Congress in April to talk about how Facebook is tackling false reports, and even recently a video that was shared via Facebook (which had 4 million views before being taken down) falsely suggested that smart meters emit radiation levels that are harmful to health. The information in the video was believed by many even though it was false.

Scoring System

Back in August 2018, it was revealed that for 2 years Facebook had been trying to manage some misinformation issues by using a system (operated by its own ‘misinformation team’) that allocated a trustworthiness score to some members.  Facebook is reported to be already working with fact-checkers in more than 20 countries. Facebook is also reported to have had a working relationship with Full Fact since 2016.

Full Fact’s System

This new system from third-party Full Fact will now focus on Facebook in the UK.  When users flag up to Facebook what they suspect may be false content, the Full Fact team will identify and review public pictures, videos or stories and use a rating system that will categorise them as true, false or a mixture of accurate and inaccurate content.  Users will then be told if the story they’ve shared, or are about to share, has been checked by Full Fact, and they’ll be given the option to read more about the claim’s source, but will not be stopped from sharing anything.

Also, the false rating system should mean that false content will appear lower in news feeds, so it reaches fewer people. Satire from a page or domain that is a known satire publication will not be penalised.

Like other Facebook third-party fact-checkers, Full Fact will be able to act against pages and domains that repeatedly share false-rated content e.g. by reducing by their distribution and by reducing their ability to monetise and advertise.  Also, Full Fact should be able to stop repeat offenders from registering as a news page on Facebook.

Assurances

Full Fact has published assurances that among other things, they won’t be given access to Facebook users’ private data for any reason, Facebook will have no control over what they choose to check, and they will operate in a way that is independent, impartial and open.

Political Ad Transparency – New Rules

In October last year, Facebook also announced that a new rule for the UK now means that anyone who wishes a place an advert relating to a live political issue or promoting a UK political candidate, referencing political figures, political parties, elections, legislation before Parliament and past referenda that are the subject of national debate, will need to prove their identity, and prove that they are based in the UK. The adverts they post will also have to carry a “Paid for by” disclaimer to enable Facebook users to see who they are engaging with when viewing the ad.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

As users of social networks, we don’t want to see false news, and false news that influences the outcome of important issues (e.g. elections and referendums) have a knock-on effect to the economic and trade environment which, in turn, affects businesses.

Facebook appears to have lost a lot of trust over the Cambridge Analytica (SCL Elections) scandal, findings that Facebook was used to distribute posts of Russian origin to influence opinion in the U.S. election, and that the platform was also used by parties wishing to influence the outcome of the UK Referendum. Facebook, therefore, must show that it is taking the kind of action that doesn’t stifle free speech but does go some way to tackling the spread of misinformation via its platform.

There remains, however, some criticism in this case that Facebook may still be acting too slowly and not decisively enough, given the speed by which some false content can amass millions of views.

Reddit Locks Out Users Over Security Concerns

Online community Reddit shut some users out of their accounts and forced password resets due to “unusual activity” which may have been a ‘credential stuffing’ attempt by hackers.

Reddit

California-based Reddit, founded in 2005, is a kind social network / online community.  Reddit, which is the fifth most popular site in the United States (Alexa figures), is split into over a million communities called “subreddits,” each one covering a different topic.  Reddit allows registered members to submit content to the site, and that content is voted up and down by other members.

What Happened With The Lockdown?

According to Reddit’s own reports, a large group of accounts had to be locked down due to a security concern which took the form of account activity that resembled someone using very simple passwords or the reuse of credentials across multiple websites or services – in other words, a credential-stuffing attempt.

Reddit’s admin known as “u/Sporkicide” reported that it appeared likely that a list of usernames and passwords, possibly taken from another compromised site, were being tried against other popular sites, including Reddit, to see if they work e.g. if a user had used the same username and password for multiple websites.

Reddit advised customers, those with locked accounts would be allowed to reset their passwords and thereby unlock and restore their accounts. Reddit said that the notification to do so would be a notification to the account (affected customers could still log in to get it) and/or an email to any support ticket raised by affected users.

Not The First Time

Back in August 2018 Reddit reported that between a June 14th and June 18, an attacker compromised some employee accounts through their cloud and source code hosting providers and was able to access some user data, including email addresses and a complete 2007 database backup containing old passwords and early Reddit user data from the site’s launch in 2005 through May 2007.

Advice

As well as announcing that it was conducting a “painstaking investigation” of the incident, Reddit advised users to make sure that they choose strong passwords that are unique to Reddit, update their email addresses to enable automated password resets, and add two-factor authentication their accounts to make them more secure.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

This story highlights the importance of not using the same username and password across many websites.  The danger is that, if hackers can steal login credentials in a hack on one website, they or other attackers who have purchased / acquired the stolen data may well try to use that login data on many other popular websites to try and gain access.

Also, where other security measures such as two-factor authentication are available, it is worth using it as an extra obstacle to the kind of simple, opportunistic credential-stuffing attempts that are all-too-frequent.

Businesses / organisations should always encourage users to use login details that are unique to their website, give visual guidance on password strength on set-up, and specify a certain number of required characters for passwords e.g. including a capital letter, numbers, other special characters, and making the password a certain length.  As well as being a bit more secure, this can also help to stop people from using exactly the same password between multiple sites.

New Hashtags Feature For Google Maps

Google has begun the global rollout of its new ‘hashtags’ feature in Google Maps, which allows users to add hashtags to the end of the reviews they write, thereby helping others to find local attractions and businesses.

How It Works

When using Google Maps e.g. to find places to eat or local attractions, if a Google Maps user then chooses to write a review afterwards, they are given the opportunity to add up to five hashtags to the end of the review (to keep the text easy to read).  The hashtags need to be specific to be useful e.g. #love or #food, but things like #familyfriendly, #wheelchairaccessible, #sunsetviews, or #vegetarian.

The idea is that these hashtags will make it easier for other users to discover places that have been recommended by others for specific reasons, thereby increasing the value of Google Maps to users.

More Competitive

From Google’s point of view, this (and other new features) could help Google Maps to compete against other platforms in the world of social recommendations as well as other popular local search offerings such as Yelp.

Just Local Guides For Now

So far in the rollout of Hashtags, it’s only available on Android for members of Maps’ Local Guides program.  This is the program where members receive rewards for sharing their opinions and photos for the places they visit and review.

Added to ‘Follow’ & ‘My Business’ Updates

The new hashtag feature comes right after the new ‘Follow’ feature that was introduced to Maps last month.  ‘Follow’ allows users to click a follow button for locations which enables them to receive updates about any events and offers e.g. from favourite stores and restaurants, and information about new places that are due to open soon.

The update to ‘My Business’ in Google was to enable businesses to update their Maps profile with new content, use the app to view and respond to reviews and messages, and to enable businesses to add all the content that will work with ‘Follow’.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

Local search and platforms offering users value-adding information and recommendations about the places they plan to visit are now competitive areas, and Google wants to stay ahead of the game.  Adding social elements such as hashtags, ‘Follow’, and direct messaging all contribute to the vital engagement factor for Google and can be monetised.

Other updates to Google Maps that could add even more value to Google’s platform from a consumer’s point of view are a useful commuter tab that shows a user information about their commute e.g. real-time public transit information and status alerts about anything that could cause delays, and allowing users to control their music from inside Google Maps. Google is clearly well placed and is fighting hard to make its platform more attractive than competing offerings.  It will be a matter of opinion, however, how user-friendly all these bundled features turn out to be.

New Political Ad Transparency Rules Tested With Pro-Brexit Website

No sooner had Facebook announced new rules to force political advertisers to prove their identities and their ad spend than an anonymous pro-Brexit campaign website with a massive £257,000 ad spend was discovered.

Mainstream Network

The anonymous website and campaign identified only as ‘Mainstream Network’ was discovered by Campaign group 89up. Clicking on the Facebook adverts by Mainstream Network takes users to a page on their local constituency and MP, and clicking from there was found to generate an email to their MP requesting that the Prime Minister should abandon her Chequers Brexit deal. It has also been discovered that a copy of each of the emails is sent back to Mainstream Network.

11 Million People Reached

Campaign group 89up estimate that the unknown backers of Mainstream Network must have spent in the region of £257,000 to date on the Facebook adverts, which 89up estimate could have reached 11 million people.

What’s The Problem?

The problem with these political adverts is that Facebook has recently announced new rules in the UK that require anyone wishing to place an advert relating to a live political issue, promoting a UK political candidate, referencing political figures, political parties, elections, legislation before Parliament and past referenda that are the subject of national debate, to prove their identity, and prove that they are based in the UK. Policing this should involve obtaining proof of identity and where they are based e.g. by checking a passport / driving licence / resident permit. According to Facebook, any political adverts must also carry a “Paid for by” disclaimer to enable Facebook users to see who the adverts are from, and the “Paid for by” link next to each advert should link through to a publicly searchable archive of political adverts showing a range of the ad’s budget and number of people reached, and the other ads that Page is running, and previous ads from the same source.

GDPR Breach Too?

It is also believed that sending a copy of the email back to Mainstream Network, in this case, could also constitute a breach of GDPR.

First Job For Facebook’s Nick Clegg

What to do about Mainstream Network and their campaign could end up being the first big task of Facebook’s newly appointed global communications chief and former deputy PM Sir Nick Clegg. It’s been reported that Mark Zuckerberg himself and Facebook’s chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg were personally involved in recruiting Mr Clegg given the importance and nature of the role.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

After Facebook announced new rules to ensure political ad-transparency, the discovery of Mainstream Network’s anonymous adverts and the scale of the ad spend and reach must be at the very least embarrassing and awkward for Facebook, and is another piece of unwanted bad publicity for the social network tech giant. Whatever a campaign of this kind and scale is for, Facebook must really be seen to act in order to retain the credibility of its claims that it wants political ad transparency, not to lose any more of the trust if its users and advertisers, and to avoid being linked with any more political influence scandals.

Facebook has recently faced many other high profile problems including how much tax it pays, the scandal of sharing user details with Cambridge Analytica and AggregateIQ (over the UK referendum), a fine by the ICO for breaches of the U.K.’s Data Protection Act, and a major hack, and is perhaps with all this in mind that it has hired a former politician and UK Deputy Prime minister. Some political commentators have also noted that it may be very useful for Facebook to have a person on-board who knows the key players, who has reach and is able to lobby on Facebook’s behalf in one of its toughest regulatory areas, the European Union.

Facebook Messenger May Introduce Voice Commands

It has been reported that Facebook has been testing how voice commands could be used in its Messenger platform to help users to send messages, initiate voice calls and set reminders.

Internally Testing

Facebook is reported to have confirmed to tech news platform ‘TechCrunch’ that it is internally testing a prototype of voice control (which was discovered by a TechCrunch tipster) in the M assistant of Messenger.

Facebook’s new speech recognition feature goes by the name of ‘Aloha’. It is believed that Aloha will be used for Facebook and Messenger apps, as well as external hardware. The Aloha voice assistant could become part of Facebook’s planned Portal video chat screen device / smart speaker, which is currently in development.

Benefits

Enabling voice control in the Messenger platform could bring considerable benefits to users, such as being able to use Messenger ‘hands-free’ in the car, improving accessibility, and generally making it easier for people to use the Messenger platform in the home and on the go.

How Will It Work?

Initial reports indicate that Aloha will be activated in Messenger by tapping an M assistant button which will appear at the top of a message thread screen. This will enable listening for voice commands.

Need To Differentiate

Apart from the obvious, high profile, negative publicly over the Cambridge Analytica data sharing and the recent massive hack, Facebook has experienced challenges in recent times as many of its younger users have moved to Snapchat. Facebook bought Instagram in a move that many saw as a way to attract the young users that moved from Facebook, but this strategy doesn’t appear to have been highly successful.

Adding a voice assistant to Messenger could, therefore, be a way for it to tackle part of this issue, and to differentiate its Messenger option from competitors such as SMS, Snapchat, Android Messages, iMessage and other texting platforms. Facebook is also known to be experimenting with other visual features such as Facebook Stories, augmented reality filters and more in order to help engage and retain users, and differentiate its services.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

Facebook has been relatively late to the market with a digital voice assistant, but it appears to have found a way to deploy it at a time when it may be most needed to help differentiate its services from competing services, and to generate some good publicity amid the bad.

One of the biggest challenges that Facebook has at the moment, apart from the fact that Snapchat, iMessage, WhatsApp and other services are already popular and users may be loyal, is one of trust by users. The Cambridge Analytica data sharing scandal, and the recent hack which could have more reverberations as cyber-criminals sell and use the data they stole, may mean that users may not trust Facebook to handle their speech data as responsibly as they would like. There are, for example, stories of how other digital voice assistants have listened-in on their users e.g. back in May when an Amazon Echo (Alexa) recorded a woman’s conversation and shared it with one of her husband’s employees. It remains to be seen, therefore, whether users will now be willing to trust Facebook with what is still quite a sensitive area of personal data governance, particularly where business conversations are concerned.

Facebook Promptly Removes Mynamar Military Accounts

Facebook has reacted quickly and taken down many accounts of Myanmar’s military leaders after a damning UN report accused them of genocide and war crimes against the Muslim Rohingya population.

Removed

It has been reported that, following the release of the report, Facebook removed a total of 18 user accounts, and 52 pages associated with the Myanmar military. These are thought to include the page of its commander-in-chief.

All of the removed pages and accounts are thought to have had a total of almost 12 million followers.

The Situation, In Brief

The action by Facebook relates to the situation in Myanmar, formerly Burma, where approximately 25,000 Rohingya Muslims have been killed and an estimated 700,000 forced to flee to Bangladesh in over the past year. The blame for the alleged genocide has been placed firmly at the door of the Myanmar military, and the country’s leader and Nobel Prize winner, Ang San Suu Kyi, has been widely criticised for apparently failing to use her position as head of government, or her moral authority, to stop the persecution and violence in Rakhine state.

Facebook – Several Reasons

As well as the fact that the accounts relate to suspected war criminals, Facebook has several reasons to act quickly in taking down the accounts of military leaders and their associates, including the fact that:

– Facebook, by its own admission, had been too slow up until now in acting to remove posts aimed at stirring up and spreading hatred against the minority Muslim Rohingya population.

– Facebook is a very popular social network in Myanmar, and thus bad as well as good messages can be distributed widely and quickly using the platform.

– The Tatmadaw (the official name of the armed forces of Myanmar) has been using its official Facebook pages to discredit allegations of the crimes it has committed, and to stir-up further fears about the Rohingya. Also, the Tatmadaw are thought to have been using bogus independent news and opinion pages to covertly push their own messages.

– Facebook is very aware that it has been used as a means to influence political opinion and even election outcomes in some other countries i.e. alleged Russian use of Facebook in the US election. This has made Facebook anxious to stop this happening.

– The social network, along with other platforms, apps, and tech giants, has long been accused by many different governments of failing to act / failing to act quickly enough to remove hate speech and racist content.

– Facebook and other platforms have been threatened with regulation e.g. Ofcom in the UK, and Facebook is anxious to claw back much of the trust it lost in the Cambridge Analytica scandal, as well as getting some good publicity.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

Most businesses like to operate in and associate themselves with stable countries, particularly where they feel the government is trustworthy, and where the military don’t have too much power. The cost in human suffering in events and circumstances in Myanmar have been terrible, and this has also caused the economy to suffer, as its growth has slowed, it’s currency has dropped against the dollar, and as other countries and potential trading partners have tried to distance themselves from the current regime.

For Facebook, this has been a much-needed opportunity to present its positive side and show that it can and will act quickly to police its own network where it feels it has credible and conclusive evidence to do so, and to be able to justify its actions. This has been something that Facebook appears to have been much more keen to do lately e.g. in deleting 30+ pages and accounts attempting to influence the US midterm elections, and in removing 650+ fake Facebook accounts and pages, and pages designed to influence politics in US and the UK, as well as in the Middle East and Latin America.

The power and responsibility of social network platforms is now beginning to become apparent. Businesses are now major advertisers on social networks too, and as such, they need to ensure that they can reach the right audience in enough numbers and that their advertising doesn’t suffer from negative associations or being displayed next to content or posts that promote hatred.

New Australian Law Gets The Thumbs-Down From Tech Firms

In Australia, a new draft bill proposing ways for tech firms, software developers and others to assist security agencies and police has been given the thumbs-down by a major industry group over its ambiguity, and the potential security risks it could create.

What Bill?

The new “Telecommunications and Other Legislation Amendment (Assistance and Access) Bill 2018” is a Bill for an Act to amend the law relating to telecommunications, computer access warrants and search warrants, and for ‘other purposes’.

The bill proposes that a ‘technical assistance request’ may be given to a tech company e.g. a social media or chat app company asking that provider to offer ‘voluntary’ help in the form of ‘technical assistance’ to the Australian Secret Intelligence Service or an ‘interception agency’ with a view to enforcing / helping to enforce the criminal law, protecting the public revenue, and / or acting in the interests of Australia’s national security, foreign relations, or economic well being.

What Kind of Technical Assistance?

In essence, those who have interpreted and reacted publicly to the contents of the bill have taken it to mean that as part of the Australian government’s fight against the criminal use of encrypted communications (end-to-end encryption), tech firms will be asked to build weaknesses / ‘back doors’ into their products/ services that will enable government monitoring.

For example, the UK government (under then Home Secretary Amber Rudd) were seeking ‘back door’ access to encrypted apps such as Facebook’s WhatsApp on the grounds that terror suspects were known to have used it for communication prior to the Westminster attack. At the time, WhatsApp refused to co-operate on the grounds that end-to-end encryption prevented even its own technicians from reading people’s messages.

WhatsApp has also been blocked three times in Brazil for failing to hand over information relating to criminal investigations.

Worked In Germany

Presumably and ideally, the kind of thing that the new bill would be used for in Australia would be in the same way that German encrypted communications App ‘Telegram” had a back-door built into it which allowed law enforcement agencies to access messages, enabling them to foil a planned suicide attack on a Christmas market in 2016.

Digi Objects

The loudest critic of the new Bill in Australia has been the Digital Industry Group (known as ‘Digi’) whose members include Facebook, Google and Twitter. Their main arguments against the bill are that it is ambiguous and lacks judicial oversight, and building any back-doors for government agencies into encrypted services will also be creating access for criminals to exploit. Big social media tech firms say, for example, that building such potential vulnerabilities into their services could not only leave the majority of their customers vulnerable to attack for the sake of catching a minority, but could also undermine the essential trust in their services.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

Privacy, security, and freedom from unnecessary surveillance are valued concerns by individuals and businesses, but national security is also an issue, and is something that affects the wider economy. The bill from the Australian government is the latest in a long line of similar requests that the big tech companies are facing from governments around the world. The conundrum, however, is the same. Tech companies are private businesses whose services allow users to share personal data, and they need the trust of their users that privacy and security will be preserved, and yet governments would like access to the private conversations, hopefully just for national security purposes. Also, once a back-door is built-in to an encrypted service (e.g. end-to-end encrypted services), it is no longer really secure, and all users could potentially be at risk. Bills suggesting that help by tech firms would be ‘voluntary’ are also likely to mean that failure to comply voluntarily would undoubtedly have negative consequences for tech firms (e.g. fines).

As freedom and privacy groups would point out, there is also some mistrust over government motives for accessing more of our private conversations and details, and in the wake of the Facebook / Cambridge Analytica scandal for example, there are questions about just who else our details and private conversations and opinions could be shared with and how that could be used. It is also a fact that governments tend not to like communications tools and currencies (e.g. Bitcoin) that they can’t access, control, or regulate.

The ‘big brother’ element to bills like these worries citizens in all countries, and some tech companies, which are certainly not blameless (e.g. on user tracking and data sharing activities) are likely to try and hold out as long as possible from publicly being seen to be co-operating with any wide-scale government surveillance.

Facebook Uses Scoring System To Manage Misinformation

It has been reported that Facebook allocates a trustworthiness score to some members to help it manage misinformation issues such as some members continually flagging / reporting stories as fake if they don’t agree with the content.

Score?

It is not publicly known exactly how the score is arrived at, but it has been reported recently in the Washington Posts that Facebook’s ‘Misinformation Team’ will be making use of the metric, a system that has taken a year to develop.

Why?

It is understood that the system, which Facebook denies amounts to a reputation score, is part of an initiative announced 2 years ago to find a way to deal with issues around fake news and fighting misinformation.

These include both making news with dubious / fake content appear lower in users’ news feeds, and stopping people from indiscriminately flagging news as fake in order to control and influence news and opinions.

Repeat Flaggers In The Spotlight

The scoring system will have a focus on stopping some Facebook members from simply flagging / reporting stories they don’t agree with.

Some commentators have speculated that this part of the scoring system works by correlating any false news reports with the decisions of independent fact-checkers, and by giving higher scores (and presumably higher news feed positions) to a user who makes a single complaint that is substantiated, than to a user who makes lots of complaints, only some of which are substantiated.

Not The First Time

Facebook is not the first and only platform to us such scoring systems for members. For example, Uber rates customers on scores they’ve given to drivers, Twitter has been reported as having used a reputation score to help recommend which members to follow, and a pilot scheme in China is allocating a social credit score to citizens based on their online behaviour.

Criticism

The Facebook scoring system has been criticised by some people who say that Facebook’s own trustworthiness is unregulated, the scoring system is automated and not transparent, and could amount to another way of Facebook using peoples’ data in a way they may not expect or want (bearing in mind the Facebook / Cambridge Analytica scandal).

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

We are used to the idea that decisions that affect businesses are made using algorithms and automatic scoring systems i.e. search engine rankings. If the new Facebook scoring system works as it should and for the purpose that Facebook has stated, then it may contribute to better management of misinformation, which can only benefit the economy and businesses.

Unfortunately, how Facebook can be trusted to use our data behind the scenes is a sore subject at the moment, and it could be said that mistrust of Facebook and its motives with this move is expected and healthy. Since the Cambridge Analytics revelations, and findings that Facebook was used to distribute dubious, politically influential posts of Russian origins leading up to the US election, Facebook has to at least be seen / reported to be doing more to manage misinformation on its platform.

Unfortunately for Facebook, the scoring system is unlikely to appeal to President Trump, who has warned that it is dangerous for tech / social media companies such as Facebook to regulate themselves. Some commentators have suggested that this concern is partly based on a fear that conservative voices may be silenced by such measures.