Near
Many active Facebook users a month, who have more than one billion active users, would agree: the site is great, but they may gain advantages from an ad. While users complain about ads, a messy and confusing interface and many other things, Facebook may simply put in place some things to make the site much more acceptable. Here are five inventions (some possible, some quite imaginative) that we think would be Facebook.
With its latest review of the news service, Facebook aimed to give users more control over what they see when they make a stop on the site for the first time. If you just need to see your friends’ messages, you can do so. Just need to see the latest news from the pages you’ve enjoyed and the celebrities you’re following? Click Next.” You can even browse forward to see posts from lists you’ve organized on Facebook. But how wonderful would it be if you could clarify the discussions you don’t really need to read in the first place? If you’re tired of reading about politics in your News Feed, or if you have too many friends who use Facebook as a game stream at sporting events, you can uncheck those features. It’s not as crazy as you think. Facebook plans to upload help for hashtags. You can believe in a world where articles are indexed and organized more through keywords. So, if you sought to block all political content in your News Feed, Facebook can simply create a clearing with the terms Barack, Obama, Democrat, Republican, Election, etc. In the upload, you can also click those features to see only articles about sports, relationships, and politics. What you can do right now: Use third-party extensions like Unbathrough.me and Social Fixer.
It turns out that almost every week a celebrity dies on Facebook, Bill Gates offers his fortune in exchange for percentages, or “Facebook” announces that he will close his account unless you pay. Sharing only takes a few seconds, and if it’s on the Internet, it’s going to have to be true, right? False. Often, photos and posts in viral percentage on Facebook are like the social media equivalent of children’s play, “Phone”. Of course, this would possibly have been true at some point, however, the meaning has been replaced as more and more people comment and comment. A lot of times, it’s just deception. If Facebook can also come with integration with Snopes, a hub for exchanging urban legends and deceptions, it would greatly decrease the exchange of fake data that doesn’t really help anyone. Bill Gates doesn’t give $5,000 if you give a percentage to a picture, Bill Cosby would possibly be tired, but he’s not 83, and Facebook rarely ends in the short term. What you can do right now: just check out Snopes before sharing anything that’s too smart to be true (your friends will thank you). We also report cheating that is in percentage on Facebook.
When a Facebook page posts something, page managers have scans without delay. While Facebook’s loose measurements may be somewhat limited, there are a lot of facilities that can provide much deeper research on who sees posts and how much they are shared. But for your non-public messages, there’s nothing. Although you can pay $7 to advertise a message, scans don’t tell you how many more people have noticed it, just a percentage breakdown of the paid content compared to the biological content. If you just need to see what kind of reach your posts get without paying for a Facebook ad, you’re out of luck. You can see who saw messages in groups, but this information can be useful with everyday messages.
Read
Pages: 1 2