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Pay to Play Censorship? Facebook Wants to Charge Publishers Access to Their Newsfeed

24-10-2017 < 21st Century Wire 65 751 words
 

Ever since to defeat of Hillary Clinton in 2016, Silicon Valley firms like Google and Facebook – all of whom backed Hillary Clinton and ploughed huge sums of money into her losing campaign – have been on a mission to try and marginalise and disappear alternative news content which runs counter to the mainstream part line.


Zuckerberg: Sold-out his use base for fame and fortune.



Now Facebook want to charge publishers and businesses would like their content to be visible in the site’s News Feed section.


This latest move by Facebook is a continuation of a pattern of corporate-fascist measures designed to kill-off dissent and alternative sources of information. His raises a few important questions:


Q: Doesn’t this amount to censorship?
A: Yes. This is a clear case of corporate censorship by stealth. If Facebook is allowed to pull this off, then only large corporations, start-up and foundation-funded media outlets will be able to afford to pay to be seen.


Q: Has Facebook done this before?
A: Yes. When FB introduced its ‘Boost’ feature on fan pages in 2015, organisations like 21WIRE were then forces to pay Facebook money per article in order for that article to be seen by people who ‘liked’ our 21WIRE Facebook page. Even though we had over 30,000 organic likes, we have to pay Facebook a minimum of $10 per article in order that this article would be seen by roughly 1,500 to 2,000 fans of our page. So essentially, it’s been quietly running a pay-to-play swindle for years now.


RT International reports…



Facebook is testing out a change to their network in six markets. As a result, posts from some publishers and businesses will be removed from the site’s News Feed section. The change has caused a dramatic drop in referral traffic to news outlets.


The posts will now only be shown in a separate tab called ‘Explore Feed,’ which was officially unveiled last week. The test is only active for people in Sri Lanka, Bolivia, Slovakia, Serbia, Guatemala, and Cambodia. Facebook confirmed the test on Monday, which was first spotted by Slovakian journalist Filip Struharik.


Some of the top Facebook pages in Slovakia lost as much as two-thirds to three-fourths of their reach due to the change, according to Facebook-owned analytics tool CrowdTangle.






Stories from publishers and businesses are being transferred from the main feed to the Explore Feed, while the main feed is reserved for posts from friends and family.


It may end up with publishers having to pay Facebook to promote their stories so that people can see them.


Facebook’s News Feed VP Adam Mosseri wrote about the test, saying: “We currently have no plans to roll this test out further.”


Mosseri also tweeted about the length of time the test will take.


According to Mosseri, “The goal of this test is to understand if people prefer to have separate places for personal and public content. We will hear what people say about the experience to understand if it’s an idea worth pursuing any further… As with all tests we run, we may learn new things that lead to additional tests in the coming months so we can better understand what works best for people and publishers.”




Facebook has been known to make dramatic changes in their algorithms that affect referral traffic and reach for publishers. Just last year, it changed how the News Feed works, prioritizing posts shared by family and friends over content shared by publishers.


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