FACEBOOK to copy TWITTER 'trends' as teens depart in droves...
Why Facebook wants to be more like Twitter Hint: Twitter
spreads news a lot faster
By Chris Gayomali | January 16, 2014
The big news in the tech world today is that Facebook is
rolling out a newly redesigned "Trending" feature. Pretty soon, users
will see a ticker on the right side of their News Feed that will spotlight what
chatty Facebookers are yapping about.
If the feature looks familiar, it should be. It's
basically Twitter's trending topics painted Facebook blue, plus a few minor
differences.
"The list is personalized, including topics based on
things you're interested in and what is trending across Facebook overall,"
explains engineering manager Chris Struhar in a blog post.
"Each topic is accompanied by a headline that
briefly explains why it is trending. You can click on any headline to see the
most interesting posts from your friends or pages that are talking about that
particular topic."
Click on the word "Golden Globes" in the
module, for example, and you'll be taken to a page full of people talking about
the drunken gabfest-cum-awards ceremony. Or at least that's the idea.
So why is Facebook interested in becoming more like
Twitter?
On the Twitter, news moves fast. On Facebook, it doesn't.
That's partly because it's just really, really big. But it's also because of
the way Facebook's News Feed relies on algorithms to organize content, unlike
Twitter, which is 99 percent chronological. Breaking news often gets swept away
on Facebook, lost in a sea of BuzzFeed listicles.
Furthermore, journalists and content producers simply
like and use Twitter more. It's an indispensable part of many influential
folks' media diets, and Facebook wants in.
Mark Zuckerberg has long expressed a deep interest in
winning over publishers, which he sees as essential to Facebook's own
essentialness as a platform. No new content means there's no reason to keep
checking Facebook.
Facebook is trying to achieve that goal in a few ways.
News broke earlier this week that Facebook was planning on building its own
version of Flipboard, a reader that arranges web links into a pretty magazine
format. Before that, Facebook tweaked its algorithm to gift web publishers —
including TheWeek.com — a massive boost in traffic, while filtering out
"low-quality content" like memes. And before that, Facebook began
courting celebrities in hopes of establishing some symbiotic relationships,
which Twitter seems to know a thing or two about.
Now, it's giving whatever people around the globe are
discussing some prime real estate.
Facebook wants in on the news business to capitalize on
your Fear of Missing Out. Like Twitter, it wants to be the first thing you see
in the morning, the last thing you check at night, and the thing you
obsessively check during all the hours in between. It wants Reddit's
self-anointed title of the front page of the internet.
Facebook's goal, in other words, is complete ubiquity.
That's pretty trendy.
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