Here's Why Instagram Is Going to Hide Your 'Likes'

A test run will roll out in Canada this week.

Advertisement
By Hamza Shaban, The Washington Post | Updated: 2 May 2019 14:36 IST

Photo Credit: Justin Sullivan/ Getty Images/ AFP

Instagram will test hiding the number of "likes" that photos and videos receive - a central aspect of its platform - to rein in competitive tendencies and make the experience a little "less pressurized."

Instagram's head, Adam Mosseri, said the change is designed to minimise the stress of posting online, where users can fixate on how many "likes" their videos draw. "We want people to worry a little bit less about how many likes they're getting on Instagram and spend a bit more time connecting with the people that they care about," he said Tuesday during Facebook's annual developer conference, F8.

In the test run, which rolls out this week in Canada, the Facebook-owned site will display user posts as usual, but people scrolling through the feed won't see "like" counts. Users will still be able to view who liked a post, and account owners will still be able to check the tallies on their own photos and videos by clicking through a prompt.

Advertisement

Mosseri said the experiment is part of a broader effort to rethink the fundamentals of how Instagram works, to create a more welcoming experience. The company also is trying out a redesigned profile page that de-emphasises follower count.

Advertisement

"We don't want Instagram to feel like a competition, we want to make it a less pressurised environment," he said.

The psychological drawbacks of social media use have gained more attention in recent years, with parents, consumer advocates and even tech companies pointing to its potential to increase anxiety and social isolation. Technologists also have taken issue with popular social media platforms that place engagement metrics at center stage, encouraging users to maximise those figures by spending more time on the site and perpetuating feedback loop of notifications and social validation.

Advertisement

Though shielding "like" counts might curtail strategic efforts to punch up engagement numbers on Instagram, other troublesome aspects like social exclusion won't be addressed with the change, said Karen North, a professor at the University of Southern California with expertise in social media and psychology. Young people might still feel left out or, worse, see their friends posting from parties and other social events without them, and reading the comments that follow. Neither is directly tied to likes, she said.

Hiding the counts could potentially introduce new problems for existing users, such as diminishing the feeling of camaraderie from liking a popular post tied to a social cause or a massive in-joke. "While we can focus on the negative side of comparing likes, it is also true that people enjoy the game of supporting a post, a friend or an influencer," she said.

Advertisement

Instagram isn't alone in trying to tamp down on the seemingly endless competition for likes and new followers. Twitter Chief Executive Jack Dorsey said last week that if he could build his social network anew, he would rethink its emphasis on likes and retweets as markers of success. In a prototype of the Twitter app, dubbed twttr, the company is experimenting with removing like and retweet counts by default. Unlike the current version of Twitter, which displays those figures for each post, the beta app shows the metrics only when a user taps the tweet.

Instagram's tests to make follower accounts less prominent and to hide the number of likes comes as Facebook prepares to update its entire suite of apps. People will soon be able to communicate using Messenger on their desktops, and the company has plans for users to chat with one another across all of its services. Facebook's iconic namesake app will also get a redesign, with the service orienting itself away from the news feed and toward groups and private messages.

© The Washington Post 2019

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Instragram, Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg
Advertisement
Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Ray-Ban Meta Gen 2 Glassses Are Now Available in India
  2. Samsung Galaxy S26 vs Galaxy S25: Here Are the Anticipated Upgrades
  3. Oppo A6x 5G With 6,500mAh Battery Launched in India at This Price
  4. Vivo X300 Pro Review: Flagship Mobile Photography. Redefined.
  5. Vivo X300 Review: Pro Power, Pocket Size
  6. Amar Subramanya to Replace John Giannandrea as Apple's VP of AI
  7. Mrs Deshpande OTT Release: When, Where to Watch Madhuri Dixit's Serial Killer Mystery
  8. Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold vs Huawei Mate XT Ultimate Design: A Quick Comparison
  9. Redmi Note 15 5G Series Price, Key Features Leak Hints at Global Debut
  10. Vivo X300 Launched in India With MediaTek Dimensity 9500 SoC at This Price
  1. Redmi 15C 5G Launching Today: Know Price in India, Features and Specifications
  2. Gemini App to Get a Major Design Upgrade, Could Soon Be Launched on macOS
  3. NASA’s Perseverance Records First-Ever Mini-Lightning on Mars
  4. Germany to Send First European Astronaut Around the Moon on Artemis Mission
  5. Indian Team Finds 53 Massive Quasars Blasting Jets Millions of Light-Years Long
  6. Mrs Deshpande OTT Release: When, Where to Watch Madhuri Dixit's Serial Killer Mystery
  7. Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery OTT Release: When, Where to Watch the Daniel Craig Whodunit
  8. Fire Force Season 3 Release Date: When, Where to Watch the Shonen Anime's Final Arc
  9. Thamma Is Now Available on Amazon Prime: How to Watch Ayushmann Khurrana's Horror Comedy
  10. The Great Shamsuddin Family OTT Release: When, Where to Watch the Peepli Live Director's Comedy Drama
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.