Comment by dataflow

Comment by dataflow 4 days ago

31 replies

> There has actually been a friends-only feed on FB for years. Timelines -> Friends filters everything down. The problem? Nobody I care about posts anymore.

Is that really the only problem? How many taps/clicks do you need to get there? Can you make it the default? And how obvious is it that it actually exists?

kridsdale3 4 days ago

I used to be TL of the Facebook News Feed.

People in UX research told us constantly they wanted the feed to be about friends, and chronological.

Several times we ran A/B tests with many millions of people to try exactly this. Every time all the usage metrics tanked. Not just virality and doomscroll metrics, but how many likes, messages, comments, re-shares, and app-opens. We never even measured ad-related things on that team.

So people say they want this, like they say they want McDonalds to offer salads. Nobody orders salads at McDonalds.

  • dataflow 4 days ago

    I really appreciate the reply, thanks for sharing that.

    > Every time all the usage metrics tanked.

    What if that's exactly what people want? Less usage of Facebook (horrifying, I know -- it can't be true, right?), with a focus on friends etc. when they do use it? I know you'll dislike the analogy, but isn't all that different from smoking. You think usage metrics tanking implies the outcome is bad... why exactly? Is it that unthinkable that less quantity and more quality is better for people, and what they actually want?

    > So people say they want this, like they say they want McDonalds to offer salads. Nobody orders salads at McDonalds.

    You seem to be missing that the people who have the means to eat out wherever they want don't eat at McDonald's every few hours. They go in moderation. They actively want to avoid McDonald's most of the time. Once in a while they get a craving, or get super hungry and don't see other options, etc. and they cave in and go there. Of course the get the tasty unhealthy option when they go, but it's foolish to think they prefer to eat McDonald's all the time. (Do you seriously believe that??)

    • kridsdale3 4 days ago

      I don't dislike the analogy. I eventually reached a point where I couldn't stomach the TikTok-ification of the product that Zuck forced us to keep marching towards, so I left.

      Personally I agree with your point, less social media is better. I personally never go to Facebook anymore and set up app limits on my phone for my health. I won't let my kids use it at all.

      But I worked at a company and drew a considerable salary, so I did what I was expected to do to make the product make money.

      • palata 4 days ago

        > But I worked at a company and drew a considerable salary, so I did what I was expected to do to make the product make money.

        I appreciate the honesty here.

        And this is exactly why we need regulations.

      • dataflow 4 days ago

        > I couldn't stomach the TikTok-ification

        This seems like such a bizarre thing to put your finger on in the middle of an otherwise seemingly sincere post. Of all the hatred people have had toward Facebook the past > decade, I don't think "it's too much like TikTok" was the cause that has kept them up at night. If anything there are a ton of people who would much rather TikTok could be replaced by Facebook, so that at least the national security implications would be less dire in their eyes.

        But yeah:

        > But I worked at a company and drew a considerable salary

        nice to admit what everybody knew. With the kind of compensation Facebook gave, I doubt many would've behaved differently.

  • rcxdude 4 days ago

    >Several times we ran A/B tests with many millions of people to try exactly this. Every time all the usage metrics tanked. Not just virality and doomscroll metrics, but how many likes, messages, comments, re-shares, and app-opens. We never even measured ad-related things on that team.

    Well, yeah, but this has an implicit "engagement === good" assumption. Exactly the same thing that incentivizes unhealthy McDonald's food: they make more money when they sell food that still leaves you hungry. So, yeah, people probably did want this, and when they got it they started using Facebook in a healthy manner (no point opening it at every available moment to just scroll through 'new' trash), which tanked your metrics. If you're actually worrying about your users you should also consider that them using your product more might not actually be what they want or need.

    Ironically enough, I think the same mistake (or rather, it's more of a mistake because there's not quite such a naked financial incentive to make this worse for the affected users) has happened with the youtube analytics dashboard: multiple youtubers have said that it's actively addicting and really bad for their mental health, but any change that feeds that probably looks really good in their metrics because, hey, creators are using it more, that must mean it's good, right?

    • kridsdale3 4 days ago

      Trust me, I came in there full of motivation for "do what is good for the actual humans", and most of the rank of file were the same. FB's employees are not evil or exploitative, though I won't say its unfair to describe the leadership in such terms.

      Many times in product design meetings I would interject with "but this hurts people!" etc.

      We hated that our personal careers were directly tied to increasing the junk-food factor. It didn't feel good at all. But the choice, as crafted by HR and senior directors was clear: Junk food this thing, or lose your jobs.

      • fendy3002 4 days ago

        the problem isn't introducing junk foods into menu, but focusing on the junk foods performance and killing other food categories as the result. I know that companies need revenue to survive and improve, but they're currently focusing too much on revenue and profit that they kill everything else.

        it's like introducing unskippable ads and page-wide pop up ads makes user use adblock and killing other simpler banner ads.

  • gertlex 4 days ago

    I'm sure there's more that could be shared about how "wants" were determined, which would counter my off-the-cusp thought here, but anyways:

    Yes... my ideal would be for facebook feed to be a once-a-week addiction (maybe a bit more) where I go, see what's new, and clearly hit an end point where I know I'm seeing things I've seen before. But I'm also part of the "problem" in that I post myself maybe twice/year now.

    I'd suspect the current doomscroll-y feed like we have now/you were working on reduces my likelihood of "interacting" with friends' posts. "Do I make the effort of commenting, or lazily keep scrolling to the next-often-good 3rd party content?"

    A year or two ago, I copied some greasemonkey type script off reddit, and that nuked all the non-friend content off my feed, but that stopped working a couple months later and I haven't been strongly enough motivated to find an updated approach. I have little enough friend activity that I'd easily notice when I hit old content.

    The current doomscrolling feed of algo content sure does manage to hook me, so that's a nice indicator of the current team being successful :P

  • h4ck_th3_pl4n3t 3 days ago

    Did you consider that you are gaming your own setup rules of measurement?

    It's like "look nobody is ragebaited anymore, that's very bad for clicks"

    Guess what, you should not have used that as a means of measurement before, but it was the cheapest way to sell it to advertisers.

    If you have incentive to create a shithole of engagement, it's what you will get in return.

    • azemetre 3 days ago

      Yeah, it’s weird reading their reply. Like a drug dealer being upset that the less effective drug is less effective.

  • wwweston 3 days ago

    There's an old saying: you can never get enough of what doesn't fill your need.

    For example, when you need sleep, you can't eat enough to make you not tired, but you may well pound a lot of caffeine and sugar.

    If true, this would accomodate the simultaneous truths that:

    (a) users accurately report their preference chronological friend connection when they come to a social feed

    (b) users spend more time engaging with a social feed when the need they come to fill has irregularly payoffs

    That you can get more engagement by not giving them what they want/need (or giving them what they need irregularly) wouldn't mean that they are lying to you, it would simply mean that engagement and social payoff curves aren't the same, and the incentives to drive one might not optimize the other.

  • [removed] 4 days ago
    [deleted]
  • the_clarence 4 days ago

    You're saying that users weren't using the app enough like it's a bad thing. Users saw the tool as useful and used it.

yason 4 days ago

My facebook bookmark takes me to https://www.facebook.com/?filter=friends&sk=h_chr

I still see other content, even there, but it's still somehow manageable. I run out of updates very quickly though whereas I'd like to just start seeing older posts from friends that I've seen already.

  • dataflow 4 days ago

    This just opens the app for me on mobile. I guess on desktop it might do something.

voxic11 4 days ago

It takes 2 clicks and you can just bookmark it. https://www.facebook.com/?filter=friends&sk=h_chr

  • alanbernstein 4 days ago

    For fb app users (most) I think bookmarks are irrelevant.

    • notlisted 4 days ago

      Open in browser and add to homescreen. What's more, FB can't track you if you use the browser instead of the app.

      • dataflow 4 days ago

        > What's more, FB can't track you if you use the browser instead of the app.

        For the numerous people who use Messenger or WhatsApp or other products this seems false and irrelevant.

        • notlisted 3 days ago

          I don't use those either, but you're correct, though I believe that in the EU, data of these cannot be mixed with FB data.

    • [removed] 4 days ago
      [deleted]
1980phipsi 4 days ago

They actually made it even easier to find recently on mobile. Right there at the bottom.

  • dataflow 4 days ago

    I literally have no idea what you're referring to, and I just updated the app. Could you share a link or screenshot or something?

    • pests 4 days ago

      Facebook commonly runs A/B testing on their UI. It is almost weekly for me and one of my friends to ask each other “hey do you have the <x> tab at the bottom” for Meta apps. Marketplace, Dating, “All Chats” in messenger which was just the same as the slide out menu I bet people didn’t use much. I also think they change per-user depending on what they use.

      edit: I decided to check real quick and I do have the friends tab. Here’s a crop of it, note I edited out the last “Menu” tab for privacy.

      https://imgur.com/a/6pFa1XF

      Tabs are: Home, Friends, Marketplace, Dating, Notifications, Menu.

      • dataflow 4 days ago

        Not only was that Friends tab not there for me by default, but it also does not do the aforementioned when I customize the top(? not bottom) tab bar to I include it. What it does is to show me a list: of pending friends, and friend requests. No space to show any posts to begin with. To see my friends' posts, I have to click the hamburger, then Feeds, then Friends, then (sometimes) manually pull down to refresh, because it usually just lies to me that I've already caught up. This is designed to be actively user-hostile, as if they were forced to implement this against their will.

        • pests 4 days ago

          The Friends tab for me brings me to the actual friend feed you mentioned last but also includes pending requests and some other top matter.

      • 1980phipsi 3 days ago

        Mine has Home, Friends, Video, Marketplace, Notifications, Menu. They adjust whether to show dating based on relationship status...