For a long time, business owners and other social-media users chalked it up to some convoluted algorithm called EdgeRank, which took into account an exhaustive list of variables including posts with pictures, links out to other websites and repetitive content.
Say goodbye to EdgeRank, folks. Facebook has a new playbook for News Feed.
"EdgeRank is a name for one of the early News Feed algorithms, that we occasionally still see used by the press to refer to all the algorithms that power News Feed," a Facebook spokesperson says. "It is not a word that we use internally because it doesn't capture how today's News Feed algorithms, which take into account a variety of social factors, work."
Because there are so many posts that users could want to see in their News Feeds -- posts from friends, businesses they like, etc. -- most people don't have enough time to see them all. So Facebook says its new algorithms "listen" to user feedback, essentially letting people decide who and what to connect with.
"When a user likes something, that tells News Feed that they want to see more of it; when they hide something, that tells News Feed to display less of that content in the future," Facebook says in an announcement today. This allows Facebook to prioritize which posts to feature in a specific user's News Feed.
Here are some of the user signals the News Feed algorithm considers when serving up posts:
- How often you interact with the friend, page or public figure (like an actor or journalist) who posted.
- The number of likes, shares and comments a post receives from the world at large and from your friends in particular.
- How much you have interacted with this type of post in the past.
- Whether or not you and other people across Facebook are hiding or reporting a given post.
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