The Media Today

Facebook “transparency report” turns out to be anything but

August 26, 2021
 

Last week, Facebook released a report detailing some of the most popular content shared on the site in the second quarter of this year. The report is a first for the social network. Guy Rosen, Facebook’s vice president of integrity, described the content review as part of “a long journey” to be “by far the most transparent platform on the internet.” But the story behind the creation of the report shows the company still has a long way to go. To take just one example, Facebook’s new content report appears to be a co-ordinated response to critical reporting from Kevin Roose, a New York Times technology columnist, who has been tracking the posts that get the most engagement on Facebook for some time, using the company’s own CrowdTangle tool, and has consistently found that right-wing pages get the most interaction from users.

This isn’t something Facebook likes to admit, apparently. So the content report tries to do two things to contradict that impression: firstly it tries to argue that engagement, or the number of times someone clicks on a link—which Roose uses as the metric for his top ten lists—isn’t the most important way of looking at content, and so it focuses instead on “reach,” or how many people saw a certain post, with or without interacting with it. Secondly, it tries to show that even the most popular content only amounts to a tiny fraction of what gets seen on the platform (less than 0.1 percent, according to the report). As Robyn Caplan, a researcher with Data & Society has pointed out, this seems to be an attempt to show that disinformation on the platform isn’t a big deal because so few people see it.

Just after the report was published, the Times revealed that a previous version had been shelved, because it showed one of the top links on the site was to a story that said a doctor died from the COVID-19 vaccine, a report from the Chicago Tribune that was circulated widely by anti-vaccination groups and pages. Facebook said this piece of data was left out because it was still tweaking the way in which its systems reported views of content—housecleaning, a Facebook spokesman called it—but the fact that the only post that got removed was a story that became hugely popular with anti-vax disinformation groups seemed more than a little suspicious, especially since Facebook has been the subject of some harsh criticism from President Joe Biden about exactly this kind of content.

ICYMI: Regulatory repression as Russia turns the screw on independent journalism

In a series of interviews this week using CJR’s Galley discussion platform, I spoke with a number of experts in technology and social media, including Roose. “Facebook was, initially, pretty excited that I was getting so much use out of CrowdTangle,” he said. “But once people started using the top ten lists to accuse them of being a right-wing echo chamber, they lost their minds. Reporting I’ve done since then has revealed that executives were worried that they’d get blamed for Trump’s re-election in 2020, and they made pushing back on my Twitter lists an Urgent Company Priority.” Roose said it was an odd situation “when a trillion-dollar company spends months of time and effort to create a report whose primary purpose is making you look bad.”

Facebook may have spent a lot of time and effort putting it together, but Ethan Zuckerman, who runs the Initiative for Digital Public Infrastructure at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst and is the former founder and director of the MIT Media Lab, said that the main conclusion he came to after reading the report was how flawed the methodology was, since most of the top posts appeared to be spam. “Had a student turned in this list of URLs for me in a class on big data, I would have told them to redo the analysis,” he said. “That a trillion dollar company released this as a transparency report… is unbelievable.”

Sign up for CJR's daily email

Alice Marwick, a researcher at the University of North Carolina, also noted that the report left out any content shared by private accounts, or in groups. “So even if five million people shared a URL on their private Facebook account, it’s excluded from the report,” she said. This seems like a PR effort, not a serious research report.” As if to reinforce that point, Facebook posted a job opening on Wednesday for someone in the marketing department to “help shape the consumer facing Integrity and Transparency narrative” (our interview series continues on Galley all this week, and wraps up with an all-day roundtable Friday).

Here’s more on Facebook and transparency:

  • Policy piñata: Juan Ortiz Freuler, an affiliate at the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard, said the problem is that “we are overly focused on products and outputs. We are trying to solve much of this as if it were a mathematical riddle that is waiting for the right set of variables to be punched in. But the problem we are facing is a political one. No number of graphs or disaggregated data will solve it.” The broader question is around how society chooses to balance freedom of expression with privacy and other considerations, he said, and whether we let private corporations continue to control that process. “Right now these debates are a bit like playing whack-a-mole…blindfolded. I call it the policy piñata. In this game, big tech gets to move the target around.”
  • Shifting focus: Robyn Caplan, a researcher with Data & Society, said that Facebook wants to shift the focus from engagement—which it used to push as the most important metric—to reach. “Focusing on engagement does run counter to the story Facebook wants to tell about itself,” but instead shows “that its base is getting older and more right-wing,” she said. “Roose has run those numbers, with the help of CrowdTangle, and we already know who rises to the top. But I think through focusing on ‘reach’ Facebook is trying to do something else – they are trying to push back against a narrative that they are a ‘mass’ media that could have broad impacts on political life or public health. You see this messaging throughout their report. Facebook is pushing back against the impact and power that is being ascribed to their platform.”
  • CrowdTangled: NBC News reporter Brandy Zadrozny says one of the broader issues beyond the content report is that—as Roose has reported—Facebook appears to be phasing out CrowdTangle, the data tool that has allowed reporters and researchers to track the popularity of disinformation and other phenomena on the social network. “I basically use the tool every day,” she says. “It is the way we were able to tell stories about militia organizing, violence at reopen rallies, inauthentic activity by groups like the Epoch Times, health misinformation, and much much more.” Facebook has been pushing researchers to use other tools, and has broken up the internal team that used to run CrowdTangle, she says. “So Facebook is likely to close the tool any day now and we’ll lose that window into how bad guys use Facebook to trick us.”

 

Other notable stories:

  • Facebook is considering setting up another arms-length body similar to its Oversight Board to advise the company on how to make decisions around election-related issues such as political ads, according to a report in the Times. “The social network has contacted academics to create a group to advise it on thorny election-related decisions,” the paper reported, based on interviews with sources close to the company. “The proposed commission could decide on matters such as the viability of political ads and what to do about election-related misinformation.” Facebook is expected to announce the commission this fall, in preparation for the 2022 midterm elections.
  • An ABC News staffer has filed a lawsuit against Michael Corn, the former top producer at “Good Morning America,” alleging he sexually assaulted her and fostered a toxic work environment, the Wall Street Journal reports. Kirstyn Crawford, a producer on the show, alleges that Corn assaulted her in 2015 during a business trip. The suit also alleges that Jill McClain, another former ABC News producer, was sexually assaulted by Corn when the two worked at ABC’s “World News Tonight.” The suit also names ABC as a defendant, alleging the company received complaints about Corn’s conduct from several women, but failed to take disciplinary action against him.
  • Rana Cash was named the new executive editor of The Charlotte Observer, the first Black editor in the newspaper’s 135-year history. Cash, 50, is currently executive editor of the Savannah Morning News in Georgia, and has worked in sports and news journalism for three decades at outlets such as The Miami Herald, The Dallas Morning News, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Minneapolis Star-Tribune and The Louisville Courier Journal. The Observer reports that Cash promised to “ask tough questions of leadership and to cover the city’s communities from the ground up.”
  • The Washingtonian has a profile of Sally Buzbee, the new executive editor of the Washington Post, and her plans to expand the newspaper’s reach and become “the everything newspaper.” Publisher Fred Ryan tells the magazine: “We want to grow. We want to grow domestically in terms of our readership across the country, and we want to grow globally with international readers. A lot of our strategy revolves around that.” The Post‘s audience is currently between 80 million and 100 million per month, the magazine says, and the newsroom has grown from fewer than 600 staff to roughly 1,000.
  • Evette Dionne, editor-in-chief of Bitch Media, said on Twitter that she is stepping down from her position after three years because she is “burned out” and “needs to rejuvenate.” Dionne said that it was “the honor of my career to helm Bitch and I am leaving it in the best hands. The staff is beyond capable of keeping the mission going, so please continue supporting them.” She added: “I have done everything I came to do and now it’s time for me to get out of the way and make space for the next generation of independent media leaders.”
  • ESPN said it is removing host Rachel Nichols from all of its NBA programming, which includes canceling her daytime show “The Jump.” David Roberts, senior vice president of production at the network, said: “We mutually agreed that this approach regarding our NBA coverage was best for all concerned. Rachel is an excellent reporter, host and journalist, and we thank her for her many contributions to our NBA content.” Nichols is still under contract with ESPN for another year, but has been seen as on thin ice at the network since she made comments about Maria Taylor, a former colleague, in 2020. In a leaked phone conversation, Nichols said Taylor was picked to cover the NBA Finals because of her race.
  • MSNBC host Rachel Maddow has agreed to stay with the network thanks to a new contract that the Daily Beast reports will pay her $30 million per year to stay until after the 2024 election, according to anonymous sources who spoke with the news site (Brian Stelter of CNN reports that a source close to Maddow called the figure “completely inaccurate”). As part of the deal, Maddow’s long-running nightly show will end next year, and she will host a weekly program, and also have opportunities to develop “podcasts, documentaries, and other types of multimedia projects” across the various news and entertainment divisions of NBCUniversal.
  • The Atlantic’s subscriber base has grown by nearly 50 percent over the past year to more than 830,000, according to Digiday, based on the latest circulation statement filed with the nonprofit media auditing firm, the Alliance for Audited Media. That increase was fueled by the magazine’s coverage of the pandemic and the US election, but at the same time, the number of unique visitors to its website fell to just 18 million in July of this year, down from nearly 30 million in the same month last year, according to Comscore data.

Update 8/28: CrowdTangle measures engagement with Facebook posts, not clicks on links. Incorrect information appeared in a previous version of this newsletter

ICYMI: “In Kosovo, everybody has their own truth”

Mathew Ingram is CJR’s chief digital writer. Previously, he was a senior writer with Fortune magazine. He has written about the intersection between media and technology since the earliest days of the commercial internet. His writing has been published in the Washington Post and the Financial Times as well as by Reuters and Bloomberg.