Michio Hasai Michio Hasai is a social strategist and car guy. Find him on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.

Facebook wants to know why you don’t like your ads

54 sec read

How many of you love advertisements whenever you are surfing the Internet? Most of the time, we would have “tuned out” to such advertisements already, and are pretty adept at knowing which window to close, and which button to press. The social network experience on Facebook, too, has gone through some evolution over the years, and with ads being shown there, perhaps it is time to change things around. Facebook is hoping to get some user input in order to better know how they can serve their customers as well as their clients alike.

Facebook has more than 1.5 billion active advertisers. So it’s important for Facebook to know what type of ads its users like seeing on their News Feeds. On Thursday, Facebook made two updates that will help it better understand what ads work on its News Feed.  The first update is asking why someone’s hiding a specific ad. Facebook so far has given users the choice to hide an ad if they didn’t like it by clicking on the top right menu of a post. But with today’s update, Facebook is also asking why someone’s hiding a specific ad. Facebook said each of the feedback they receive will be taken into account to decide what to show on its News Feed. “If someone doesn’t want to see an ad because it’s offensive, it probably isn’t a good ad for other people on Facebook, either,” Facebook’s Product Manager Max Eulenstein wrote on the company blog.

Avatar of Michio Hasai
Michio Hasai Michio Hasai is a social strategist and car guy. Find him on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.

How should Facebook determine which news stories we see?

In case you missed it, Gizmodo reported last Monday that Facebook is actively and methodically suppressing conservative news stories, and has been doing so for a while. Even...
Avatar of Brian Molidor Brian Molidor
1 min read

Facebook is now wrapped in a massive political bias…

Facebook and Google have become the primary sources of news for a significant chunk of the developed world, which means that both companies are in...
Avatar of Brian Molidor Brian Molidor
1 min read

Facebook is making its own morning show

Back in the day, people would flip on the television or grab the newspaper as soon as they woke up, but nowadays, most people open...
Avatar of Louie Baur Louie Baur
1 min read

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *