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Main Authors: Talaga, Szymon, Wertz, Erin, Batorski, Dominik, Wojcieszak, Magdalena
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.19373
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author Talaga, Szymon
Wertz, Erin
Batorski, Dominik
Wojcieszak, Magdalena
author_facet Talaga, Szymon
Wertz, Erin
Batorski, Dominik
Wojcieszak, Magdalena
contents Platforms, especially Facebook, are primary news sources in the US. In its widely criticized "War on News," Meta algorithmically deprioritized news and political content. We use data from 40 news organizations (5,243,302 Facebook posts, 7,875,372,958 user reactions) and 21 non-news pages (396,468 posts; 1,909,088,308 reactions) between January 1, 2016 and February 13, 2025 to examine how these changes influenced news visibility on the platform. Reactions to news declined by 78% between 2021 and 2024 while reactions to non-news pages increased, indicating targeted suppression of news visibility. Low-quality sources were especially suppressed, yet the 2025 end to "War on News" increased user reactions to news, especially low-quality ones. These changes do not reflect decreased news supply, Facebook user base, or interest in news over this period.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_19373
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Changes to the Facebook Algorithm Decreased News Visibility Between 2021-2024
Talaga, Szymon
Wertz, Erin
Batorski, Dominik
Wojcieszak, Magdalena
Social and Information Networks
Platforms, especially Facebook, are primary news sources in the US. In its widely criticized "War on News," Meta algorithmically deprioritized news and political content. We use data from 40 news organizations (5,243,302 Facebook posts, 7,875,372,958 user reactions) and 21 non-news pages (396,468 posts; 1,909,088,308 reactions) between January 1, 2016 and February 13, 2025 to examine how these changes influenced news visibility on the platform. Reactions to news declined by 78% between 2021 and 2024 while reactions to non-news pages increased, indicating targeted suppression of news visibility. Low-quality sources were especially suppressed, yet the 2025 end to "War on News" increased user reactions to news, especially low-quality ones. These changes do not reflect decreased news supply, Facebook user base, or interest in news over this period.
title Changes to the Facebook Algorithm Decreased News Visibility Between 2021-2024
topic Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.19373