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If you are a regular user of Meta threads, then you must have come across at least some level of engagement bait in the āfor youā feed. However, it took the social media company long to recognize the problem, and ever since there has been a surge in such posts, Instagram chief Adam Mosseri said the company is āātrying to deal with the problem.”.
āAt Threads, we have noticed a growing trend of engagement bait, and we are trying to deal with the problem,ā Mosseri posted on the app. He did not mention details about what the company is doing about it but said more is to follow on this matter.
Mosseriās comments are the first time that Metaās top executive has addressed that specific bug, which has been catching more attention from Threads users. There is always the assumption that the feed that users always see is the algorithmic āfor youā feed, and due to that, engagement bait-style posts that necessarily receive many replies regularly trend on the app, even if it is a kind of content most users do not wish to come across.
However, the issue could be quite difficult to solve because what people commonly categorize as āengagement baitā is diverse in the application. There are outright spam posts from everyone and their dog sharing the exact kind of copypasta that reaches Facebook audiences (hereās a great recent example). Some of the types of content are accounts that tend to post an open-ended AskReddit-style question. And then there are the rage-bait posts, as Business Insiderās Katie Notopoulos chronicled late last year.
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The posts that one makes are sometimes regarding matters that would rub many a user the wrong way, given that the opinion is from someone they do not know appearing on their timeline. For instance, Iāve witnessed hundreds of threads that have gained numerous comments regarding the fact that children under a certain age should be allowed to travel by aeroplane. Notopoulos, in her experiment, reached more than 1 million views and received 5000 replies on the post which is based on the two-year-old Twitter and Reddit thread about not feeding kids visiting for playdates.
While Mosseri and Meta have not said why manipulating Threadsā algorithm to reach millions of people with this kind of post has been so simple, this appears to have to do with how the app has ranked replies in determining what to show a user. The head of Instagram responded that not all comments or replies are good.
Source: Engadget
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