To clarify, when I made the comment about it being “dismissed”, I wasn’t thinking so much about media coverage as I was about individual Facebook users seeing prediction app suggestions in their feed I was thinking that there are already a lot of unscientific and clickbait-y quizzes and games that get posted to Facebook, and was concerned that users might lump this in with those if it is presented in a similar way.
Yeah, they certainly would be reluctant to do that. But given that they already do fact-checking, it doesn’t seem impossible.
I agree, and I definitely admit that the existence of the Facebook Forecast app is evidence against my view. I was more focused on the idea that if the recommender algorithm is based on prediction scores, that would mean that Facebook’s choice of which questions to use would affect the recommendations across Facebook.
To clarify, when I made the comment about it being “dismissed”, I wasn’t thinking so much about media coverage as I was about individual Facebook users seeing prediction app suggestions in their feed I was thinking that there are already a lot of unscientific and clickbait-y quizzes and games that get posted to Facebook, and was concerned that users might lump this in with those if it is presented in a similar way.
I agree, and I definitely admit that the existence of the Facebook Forecast app is evidence against my view. I was more focused on the idea that if the recommender algorithm is based on prediction scores, that would mean that Facebook’s choice of which questions to use would affect the recommendations across Facebook.