The social networking platform Facebook has already launched its previously re-designed and popularized theme, popular news, for Android and iOS mobile users on a large scale in the United States, giving users a central location that brings together all the company's efforts after General is troubled by the changes in how the platform handles the press.
The redesign announcement came last May, with Facebook unveiling a new design for the news section, with the new design focusing more on providing a wide range of publications along with giving users more focused on delivering a wide range Of publications and give users something that seems more neutral.
Now, when you click the popular news button, the section that has a dedicated place on the main navigation bar on Apple's operating system, the user gets a numbered list of publications and stories ranked by the number of comments, comments and posts the story received through the app. Any subject to related stories from different sources, videos, photos, and publications from prominent celebrities and other public pages.
Facebook pointed out that it does not control the publications that appear, and that the ranking of the list relates to several factors such as participation in the publication within Facebook, and the participation of the publisher in general, and whether there are other articles related to the subject of this publication, May.
It is now unclear how Facebook plans to prevent false news and misleading stories coming from different pages of control over the list in the absence of human editors. In light of the company's testing of taking the top three stories and placing them in the top of Feed feed news.
The changes are highly needed depending on how Facebook treats the news after being involved in a heated debate last summer after a former company newsgroup member reported that the popular themes section was biased, leading to a major month- How to deal with the news, including the release of the editorial team responsible for the product, changes in how titles and descriptions are created, and how stories and publications are selected.
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