Are you ready for some scary numbers? After months of Mark Zuckerberg talking about how “Protecting our community is more important than maximizing our profits", Facebook is preparing to turn that commitment into a Time Well Spent product.Buried in Facebook's...
By Josh Constine, TechCrunch
Are you ready for some scary numbers? After months of Mark Zuckerberg
talking about how “Protecting our community is more important than
maximizing our profits", Facebook is preparing to turn that commitment into a Time Well Spent product.
Buried
in Facebook's Android app is an unreleased "Your Time On Facebook"
feature. It shows the tally of how much time you spent on the Facebook
app on your phone on each of the last seven days, and your average time
spent per day. It lets you set a daily reminder that alerts you when
you've reached your self imposed limit, plus a shortcut to change your
Facebook notification settings.
Facebook confirmed the feature
development to TechCrunch, with a spokesperson telling us "We’re always
working on new ways to help make sure people’s time on Facebook is time
well spent.”
The feature could help Facebook users stay mindful of how long
they're staring at the social network. This self-policing could be
important since both iOS and Android
are launching their own screen time monitoring dashboards that reveal
which apps are dominating your attention and can alert you or lock you
out of apps when you hit your time limit. When Apple demoed the feature
at WWDC, it used Facebook as an example of an app you might use too
much.
Images of Facebook's digital wellbeing tool come courtesy of our favorite tipster and app investigator Jane Manchun Wong.
She previously helped TechCrunch scoop the development of features like
Facebook Avatars, Twitter encrypted DMs, and Instagram Usage Insights
-- a Time Well Spent feature that looks very similar to this one on Facebook.
Our report on Instagram Usage Insights
led the sub-company's CEO Kevin Systrom to confirm the upcoming
feature, saying "“It’s true . . . We’re building tools that will help
the IG community know more about the time they spend on Instagram – any
time should be positive and intentional . . . Understanding how time
online impacts people is important, and it’s the responsibility of all
companies to be honest about this. We want to be part of the solution. I
take that responsibility seriously.”
Facebook
has already made changes to its News Feed algorithm designed to reduce
the presence of low-quality but eye-catching viral videos. That led to
Facebook's first ever usage decline in North America in Q4 2017, with a
loss of 700,000 daily active users in the region. Zuckerberg said on the
earnings call that this change "reduced time spent on Facebook by
roughly 50 million hours every day.”
Zuckerberg has been adamant that all time spent on Facebook isn't bad. Instead as we argued in our piece "The Difference Between Good And Bad Facebooking",
its asocial, zombie-like passive browsing and video watching that's
harmful to people's wellbeing, while active sharing, commenting, and
chatting can make users feel more connected and supported.
But
that distinction isn't visible in this prototype of the "Your Time On
Facebook Tool" which appears to treat all time spent the same. If
Facebook was able to measure our active vs passive time on its app and
impress the health difference, it could start to encourage us to either
put down the app, or use it to communicate directly with friends when we
find ourselves mindlessly scrolling the feed or enviously viewing
people's photos.
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