Outcry Greets Facebook's Emotion Test

Advertisement
By Vindu Goel, The New York Times | Updated: 30 June 2014 11:16 IST
To Facebook, we are all lab rats.

Facebook routinely adjusts its users news feeds - testing out the number of ads they see or the size of photos that appear - often without their knowledge. It is all for the purpose, the company says, of creating a more alluring and useful product.

But last week, Facebook revealed that it had manipulated the news feeds of over half a million randomly selected users to change the number of positive and negative posts they saw. It was part of a psychological study to examine how emotions can be spread on social media.

The company says users consent to this kind of manipulation when they agree to its terms of service. But in the quick judgment of the Internet, that argument was not universally accepted.

Advertisement

"I wonder if Facebook KILLED anyone with their emotion manipulation stunt. At their scale and with depressed people out there, it's possible," privacy activist Lauren Weinstein wrote in a Twitter post.

Advertisement

On Sunday afternoon, the Facebook researcher who led the study, Adam D.I. Kramer, posted a public apology on his Facebook page.

"I can understand why some people have concerns about it, and my co-authors and I are very sorry for the way the paper described the research and any anxiety it caused," he wrote.

Advertisement

Facebook is hardly the only Internet company that manipulates and analyzes consumer data. Google and Yahoo also watch how users interact with search results or news articles to adjust what is shown; they say this improves the user experience. But Facebook's most recent test did not appear to have such a beneficial purpose.

"Facebook didn't do anything illegal, but they didn't do right by their customers," said Brian Blau, a technology analyst with Gartner, a research firm. "Doing psychological testing on people crosses the line."

Advertisement

In an academic paper published in conjunction with two university researchers, the company reported that, for one week in January 2012, it had altered the number of positive and negative posts in the news feeds of 689,003 randomly selected users to see what effect the changes had on the tone of the posts the recipients then wrote.

The researchers found that moods were contagious. The people who saw more positive posts responded by writing more positive posts. Similarly, seeing more negative content prompted the viewers to be more negative in their own posts.

Although academic protocols generally call for getting people's consent before psychological research is conducted on them, Facebook didn't ask for explicit permission from those it selected for the experiment. It argued that its 1.28 billion monthly users gave blanket consent to the company's research as a condition of using the service.

But the social network's manipulation of its users' feelings without their knowledge stirred up its own negative reaction. Some Facebook users and critics suggested that the company had crossed an ethical boundary.

Kramer wrote that changing the emotional makeup of the news feeds had a minimal impact, prompting users to produce an average of one fewer emotional word per thousand words over the following week.

"The reason we did this research is because we care about the emotional impact of Facebook and the people that use our product," Kramer wrote. "We felt that it was important to investigate the common worry that seeing friends post positive content leads to people feeling negative or left out. At the same time, we were concerned that exposure to friends' negativity might lead people to avoid visiting Facebook."

He added, "In hindsight, the research benefits of the paper may not have justified all of this anxiety."

The uproar highlights the immense control Facebook exerts over what its users see. When someone logs in, there are typically about 1,500 items the company could display in that person's news feed, but the service shows only about 300 of them.

What you see is chosen by a mysterious algorithm that takes into account hundreds of factors, such as how often you comment on your Aunt Sally's photos, how much your friends are talking about a colleague's post about her new job, and whether you always watch those cat videos.

Facebook also solicits direct feedback. On the desktop version, for example, if you click on the arrow at the top right corner of every post, there is an option to "Make news feed better" by rating your satisfaction with various posts.

The goal of all of this, Facebook says, is to give you more of what you want so that you spend more time using the service - thus seeing more of the ads that provide most of the company's revenue.

"Ultimately, we're just providing a layer of technology that helps people get what they want," Chris Cox, chief product officer of Facebook, said during an interview in February about changes made to the news feed to show more news articles and fewer viral videos. "That's the master we serve at the end of the day."

Blau, the analyst, said that Facebook should have informed its users about the emotion study. "They keep on pushing the boundaries, and this is one of the reasons people are upset."

© 2014 New York Times News Service

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Facebook, Social, Social Media
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Vivo Confirms OriginOS 6 Update Schedule in India: See Release Timeline
  2. OnePlus 15 Confirmed to Debut in These Three Colourways
  3. OnePlus Pad 2 With Dimensity 9400+ SoC to Launch Alongside OnePlus 15
  4. Kantara: A Legend Chapter-1 Lands on Amazon Prime Video Soon
  5. Oppo Find X9 Series India Launch, Colourways Confirmed After China Debut
  1. Vast Space to Launch Haven-1, the World’s First Private Space Station in 2026
  2. Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Soars to 424PPM, Marking Biggest Yearly Jump Ever
  3. Black Hole Tears Star Apart, Sends Out Powerful Flares Six Months Later
  4. Shakthi Thirumagan OTT Release: When, Where to Watch Vijay Antony-Starrer Action Thriller Online?
  5. Former Assassin's Creed Boss Says He Was Asked to 'Step Aside' by Ubisoft
  6. Arshad Warsi's Bhagwat Chapter 1: Raakshas OTT Release: Everything You Need to Know About This Thriller
  7. Vivo Confirms OriginOS 6 Update Rollout Schedule in India: Check Full Release Timeline
  8. Huawei Nova Flip S Launched With 4,400mAh Battery, 2.14-Inch Cover Screen: Price, Features
  9. The Fantastic Four: First Steps Reportedly Set for OTT Debut Soon: All You Need to Know
  10. Huawei Nova 14 Vitality Edition Launched With 5,500mAh Battery, 50-Megapixel Selfie Camera: Price, Specifications
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.