Accusing Facebook of 'Effectively Banning Professional Journalism,' Brazil's Largest Paper Ditches Platform
Accusing Facebook of discriminating against “quality” content and accelerating the spread of “fake news” with its newly-unveiled algorithm, Brazil’s largest newspaper Folha de S. Paulo—which boasts a print and online subscriber base of 285,000 people—has announced that it will no longer publish its articles on the social media platform.
“Facebook became inhospitable terrain for those who want to offer quality content like ours.”
—Sérgio Dávila, Folha de S. Paulo
“In effectively banning professional journalism from its pages in favor of personal content and opening space for ‘fake news’ to proliferate, Facebook became inhospitable terrain for those who want to offer quality content like ours,” Sérgio Dávila, Folha’s executive editor, said in a statement.
In an article published on Thursday, Folha—which has over 5.7 million followers on Facebook—noted that over the past several months it had begun to detect a sharp decline in interactions not just with its own Facebook posts, but with those of other major Brazilian newspapers as well.
By contrast, the newspaper’s analysis found, “fake news pages received five times the number of engagements that professional journalism received.”
For this decline in engagement, Folha blamed Facebook’s new algorithm, which the paper said “privilege[s] personal interaction contents, to the detriment of those distributed by companies, such as those that produce professional journalism.”
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