(by Michael Nunez,
Gizmodo) – Depending on whom you ask, Facebook is either the savior or
destroyer of journalism in our time. An estimated 600 million people see a news
story on Facebook every week, and the social network’s founder Mark Zuckerberg
has been transparent about his goal to monopolize digital news distribution. “When news is as fast as everything else on
Facebook, people will naturally read a lot more news,” he said in a Q&A
last year, adding that he wants Facebook Instant Articles to be the “primary
news experience people have.”
Facebook’s stranglehold
over the traffic pipe has pushed digital publishers into an uneasy alliance
with the $350 billion behemoth, and the news business has been caught up in a
jittery debate about what, precisely, the company’s intentions are. Will it
swallow the news business whole, or does it really just want publishers to put
neat things in users’ news feeds? For its part, Facebook – which has recently
begun paying publishers including Buzzfeed and the New York Times to post a
quota of Facebook Live videos every week – bills its relationship with the
media as a mutually beneficial landlord-tenant partnership.
But if you really want
to know what Facebook thinks of journalists and their craft, all you need to do
is look at what happened when the company quietly assembled some to work on its
secretive “trending news” project. …According to five former members of
Facebook’s trending news team – “news curators” as they’re known internally – Zuckerberg
& Co. take a downright dim view of the industry and its talent. In
interviews with Gizmodo, these former curators described grueling work
conditions, humiliating treatment, and a secretive, imperious culture in which
they were treated as disposable outsiders. After doing a tour in Facebook’s
news trenches, almost all of them came to believe that they were there not to
work, but to serve as training modules for Facebook’s algorithm.
Launched in January
2014, Facebook’s trending news section occupies some of the most precious real
estate in all of the internet, filling the top-right hand corner of the site
with a list of topics people are talking about and links out to different news
articles about them. The dozen or so journalists paid to run that section are
contractors (called curators) who work out of the basement of the company’s New
York office.
“We
were housed in a conference room for two-and-a-half months,” said one former
curator (all former curators insisted on anonymity out of concerns over
violating their non-disclosure agreements with Facebook). “It
was clear that Zuckerberg could squash the project at any moment.”
“It
was degrading as a human being,” said another. “We weren’t
treated as individuals. We were treated in this robot way.”
This section [the
trending news section] drives a substantial number of monthly views to news
outlets. Facebook wouldn’t specify, but
anecdotal evidence suggests that being featured in the trending widget boosts
clicks to a story by many thousands. The trending news section is
responsible for dictating many of the stories the average person reads when
they’re using Facebook. But nobody really knows much about how it works – and
the company isn’t telling.
“We
choose what’s trending,” said one former news curator.
The
trending news section is run by people in their 20s and early 30s, most of whom
graduated from Ivy League and private East Coast schools like Columbia
University and NYU. They’ve previously worked at [liberal
media] outlets like the New York Daily News, Bloomberg, MSNBC, and the
Guardian. Some former curators have left Facebook for jobs at organizations
including the New Yorker, Mashable, and Sky Sports.
According
to former team members interviewed by Gizmodo, this small group has the power
to choose what stories make it onto the trending bar and, more importantly,
what news sites each topic links out to. “We
choose what’s trending,” said one. “There was no real standard for
measuring what qualified as news and what didn’t. It was up to the news curator
to decide.” …
When
the curators, hired by companies like BCForward and Pro Unlimited (which are
then subcontracted through Accenture to provide workers for Facebook), arrive
at work each day, they read through a list of trending topics ranked by
Facebook’s algorithm from most popular (or most engaged) to least.
The curators then determine the news story the terms are related to.
The news curation team
writes headlines for each of the topics, along with a three-sentence summary of
the news story it’s pegged to, and choose an image or Facebook video to attach
to the topic. The news curator also chooses the “most substantive post” to
summarize the topic, usually from a news website. The former contractors Gizmodo interviewed said they were asked to
write neutral headlines, and encouraged to promote a video only if it had been
uploaded to Facebook. They were also told to select articles from a list of
preferred media outlets that included sites like the New York Times, Time,
Variety, and other traditional outlets. They would regularly avoid sites like
World Star Hip Hop, The Blaze, and Breitbart, but were never explicitly told to
suppress those outlets. They were also discouraged from mentioning Twitter by
name in headlines and summaries, and instead asked to refer to social media in
a broader context.
News curators also have
the power to “deactivate” (or blacklist) a trending topic – a power that those
we spoke to exercised on a daily basis. A topic was often blacklisted if it
didn’t have at least three traditional news sources covering it, but otherwise
the protocol was murky – meaning a curator could ostensibly blacklist a topic
without a particularly good reason for doing so. (Those we interviewed said
they didn’t see any signs that blacklisting was being abused or used
inappropriately.)
In early 2015, when
Facebook’s trending news project was still in its infancy, there weren’t many
rules about how curators did the rest of their job. “It was all pretty easy breezy,” said one. “We were trained on
the basics of everything, then we were thrown into the deep end” with some
supervision.
According to one
contractor, a colleague sent around a letter asking if people were unhappy with
their working conditions. Managers told contractors not to mention that they
worked at Facebook on their resumes or in any public profiles. “I got the sense that they wanted to keep
the magic about how trending topics work a secret,” said another former news
curator. “We had to write in the most passive tense possible. That’s why
you’d see headlines that appear in an alien-esque, passive language.” Despite
management’s best efforts, many of the contractors are publicly listed in a
simple LinkedIn search.
One reason Facebook
might want to keep the trending news operation faceless is that it wants to
foster the illusion of a bias-free news ranking process—a network that sorts
and selects news stories like an entirely apolitical machine. After all, the
company’s entire media division, which is run by Facebook’s managing editor
Benjamin Wagner, depends on people’s trust in the platform as a conduit for
information. If an editorial team is deliberating over trending topics—just
like a newspaper staff would talk about front-page news—Facebook risks losing
its image as a non-partisan player in the media industry, a neutral pipeline
for distributing content, rather than a selective and inherently flawed
curator.
That
said, many former employees suspect that Facebook’s eventual goal is to replace
its human curators with a robotic one. The former curators
Gizmodo interviewed started to feel like they were training a machine, one that
would eventually take their jobs. Managers began referring to a “more
streamlined process” in meetings. As one former contractor put it: “We felt
like we were part of an experiment that, as the algorithm got better, there was
a sense that at some point the humans would be replaced.”
When
asked about the trending news team and its future, a Facebook spokesperson
said, “We don’t comment on rumor or speculation.
As with all contractors, the trending review team contractors are fairly
compensated and receive appropriate benefits.”
According to those we
interviewed, their peers still at Facebook believe their jobs are being phased
out. From a group of about 20, Facebook has fired at least eight people this
year, and according to former curators, the company has yet to replace any of
them. “They had hired us and promised us
a job for at least a year,” said one. “Within three months, six of us were
fired. No reason was given. We were just told ‘the company is cutting back.’”
One former contractor thinks that Facebook’s end
goal with its trending section is simple.
“It’s
an experiment,” this person said. “They are just
running tests to see what would increase engagement. At the end of the day,
engagement was the only thing they wanted.”
The data Facebook is
gleaning from upwards of 1 billion users clicking through the trending news
module could have a significant impact on the future of news – what we read,
how, and from which sources. A future that, if it’s not being determined by a
group of 20-something contractors in a basement, will be determined in part by
the algorithm that group trained. “They
have it down to a science,” said one former curator. “We were truly slaves
to the algorithm.”
Posted
at Gizmodo on May 4, 2016. Reprinted
here May 5, 2016 for educational purposes only.
Source : http://www.studentnewsdaily.com/daily-news-article/want-to-know-what-facebook-really-thinks-of-journalists/

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