New feature
Facebook’s Introduces A
Snooze Feature Lets You Mute Annoying Friends For A Month
Facebook is finally letting its users do
something about friends who can be pretty annoying in the newsfeed, those who
often share more than three posts each day, flooding the newsfeed with cat
pictures, vacation videos, and all sorts of clickbait articles.
Facebook
Announces New Snooze Button
The
new "Snooze" button takes care of that. If users determine that a
friend, page, or a group is too much of a nuisance, they can click on the
drop-down menu beside one of their posts on the newsfeed and hit Snooze. They
will be removed from the newsfeed for 30 days.
This
is a less severe compromise than unfollowing a person altogether, and that's
just fitting, as Facebook says many users want to be able to stop seeing posts
from certain people, but not forever. This could also perhaps be a great way to
test whether removing people from the newsfeed yields a much better user
experience — at which point they can opt to unfollow the annoying people
entirely.
Facebook
Friends Annoying You? Snooze Them
"We've
heard from people that they want more options to determine what they see in
News Feed and when they see it," Facebook said in a
blog post. "With Snooze, you don't have to unfollow or unfriend
permanently, rather just stop seeing someone's posts for a short period of
time."
The
new Snooze button is the latest addition to presently existing controls on
Facebook, Unfollow and Hide, which lets users permanently erase certain groups,
pages, or friends from the newsfeed without unfriending them altogether. Snooze
is a more benign method of shooing away people, but then again, users who find
that they're frequently snoozing certain people on Facebook should probably
just unfollow or unfriend them entirely.
Facebook
had been testing the
Snooze feature since September, but now it should be available to all users.
Facebook’s
Introduces A Snooze Feature Lets You Mute Annoying Friends For A Month
Facebook is
finally letting its users do something about friends who can be pretty annoying
in the newsfeed, those who often share more than three posts each day, flooding
the newsfeed with cat pictures, vacation videos, and all sorts of clickbait
articles.
Facebook Announces New Snooze Button
The new
"Snooze" button takes care of that. If users determine that a friend,
page, or a group is too much of a nuisance, they can click on the drop-down
menu beside one of their posts on the newsfeed and hit Snooze. They will be
removed from the newsfeed for 30 days.
This is
a less severe compromise than unfollowing a person altogether, and that's just
fitting, as Facebook says many users want to be able to stop seeing posts from
certain people, but not forever. This could also perhaps be a great way to test
whether removing people from the newsfeed yields a much better user experience
— at which point they can opt to unfollow the annoying people entirely.
Facebook Friends Annoying You? Snooze Them
"We've heard from people that they want more options to
determine what they see in News Feed and when they see it," Facebook said in
a blog post. "With Snooze, you don't have to unfollow or unfriend permanently,
rather just stop seeing someone's posts for a short period of time."
The new
Snooze button is the latest addition to presently existing controls on
Facebook, Unfollow and Hide, which lets users permanently erase certain groups,
pages, or friends from the newsfeed without unfriending them altogether. Snooze
is a more benign method of shooing away people, but then again, users who find
that they're frequently snoozing certain people on Facebook should probably
just unfollow or unfriend them entirely.
Facebook had been testing the Snooze feature since
September, but now it should be available to all users.
The
feature comes at a time of increased public criticism and discourse on Facebook's
effect on society. In recent weeks, two former company executives have
expressed concern about Facebook usage, arguing that social media may be
negatively affecting people's brains. Of the former executives, Chamath
Palihapitiya, even went as far as to say social media is
destroying society.
"People
need to hard break from some of these tools," he said. "The
short-term dopamine-driven feedback loops that we have created are destroying
how society works."
In response, Facebook said it's become a socially conscious
company in recent years, yet researchers at the company
admitted that they too were contemplating on the ill-effects of social media.
"We want Facebook to be a place for meaningful interactions
with your friends and family — enhancing your relationships offline, not
detracting from them," said Facebook
in a blog post Friday, Dec. 15. "After all, that's what Facebook has
always been about. This is important as we know that a person's health and
happiness relies heavily on the strength of their relationships."
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