"Your friend Xiao Mei praised a picture on Instagram," or "Eh, Colombia, what video did you praise on Vimeo yesterday?" "I believe many Facebook users have had embarrassing, offensive experiences because of Facebook's automatic posting status," he said. You can be free.
Last week, Facebook made some minor changes to Instagram, but it was significant--"the Little Plum praised/uploaded a photo" That never automatically appeared on Facebook's news.
Today, according to Theverge, Facebook is going further: the status of Third-party applications, such as Pinterest, Farmville, Spotify, and Runkeeper, will become less. In addition, Facebook will also urge developers to try not to include the automatic publishing feature in their products.
The change has a watershed in Facebook's history – it also means that Mazar "synchronizes your eating, drinking and playing on Facebook, the ups and downs of the dream is officially shattered-users are not ready, or say, do not want to help Mazar brother round this dream.
About 1 years ago, Facebook noticed that many users labeled automatic status as spam (spam), and then the social giants used the proud algorithm to gradually reduce the frequency of this type of unwanted information. The effect is good, the number of users in this category fell to the original 1/4.
Since Facebook launched the new generation of open graph--in the early 2012, it has become standard for big-name applications such as Nike, Spotify and Instagram. Washington Post is the first to eat crabs-when its readers read an article, it automatically publishes this status to the reader's Facebook news. This kind of state is annoying and embarrassing for users--sometimes you don't want people to know what you've seen, read, or listen to online.
While the Facebook move does not mean that it intends to end the automatic release outright, at least it has an attitude towards developers: even when users use your apps, Facebook automatically releases the relevant dynamics, which does not mean they prefer your product-a state that is implicitly shared (implicit Sharing). Facebook, developers, and users are really interested in explicit sharing (explicit sharing)-This behavior and information is valuable only if the user intentionally publishes what he or she is looking at, reading, and using.
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