Facebook Testing Prompt to Ensure You Read Articles Before Sharing Them

Facebookhas long had a problem ofmisinformation. The social media platform is often ridiculed for it, but the company seems to be working on a new safeguard of sorts. Facebook is running a new test that will prompt users to read articles before sharing them on the platform, according to a tweet from the company. This is similar in idea to Twitter’s implementation of a similar feature last year, asking people to read articles before retweeting them.

Starting today, we’re testing a way to promote more informed sharing of news articles. If you go to share a news article link you haven’t opened, we’ll show a prompt encouraging you to open it and read it, before sharing it with others.pic.twitter.com/brlMnlg6Qg

— Facebook Newsroom (@fbnewsroom)May 10, 2021

With the new test, if a user is attempting toshare a news article that they see on Facebook, the app will prompt the user to read the articlebefore they share it. This way, Facebook hopes, more people will read news articles and get all their facts straight before sharing information on the website.

That said, the test won’t completely lock you out of sharing, either. In case you don’t want to read the article, or if you’ve read it somewhere else already, you can go ahead and skip the prompt’s warnings and simply share the article on your feed as well.

The new test is not live for a vast number of people right now. In fact, a Facebook spokesperson reportedly toldThe Vergethat the company will berolling out the test to about 6% Android users, globally. That’s not a big proportion of Facebook users by any means, but hopefully the test will be expanded to more users over time.

It’s currently unclear how effective this test will be towards curbing the spread of misinformation on the social media platform that has had multiple scandals including the infamousCambridge Analytica scandala few years ago. However, if Twitter’s implementation is any indication, Facebook’s test should result in slowing down misinformation on the platform as well.

Akshay Gangwar

Greetings, tech titans and fellow literary time-travelers! I’m Akshay, your tech-whisperer and Harry Potter’s number one stalker – seriously, don’t ask me how many times I’ve read those books; it’s borderline unhealthy.

Working in the tech journalism industry since 2016, I have 7 years of experience covering everything from technology news, to well-researched resource articles. Now the Content Strategist at Beebom, I often pen down op-eds for our website, sharing expert commentary on the latest in technology, AI, and electric cars.

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