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Wolff: Facebook and the media's interests diverge

Michael Wolff
USA TODAY
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If you are in the media these days, the most common feeling is that of incredulity as developments seem to constantly upend media expectations and assumptions. Well, now, put Facebook in the category of Donald Trump and Brexit.

The near-unanimous view in modern news management has been that Facebook was the inevitable and necessary distribution partner for all publishers. It was even seen, in a business now utterly dependent on ever-rising traffic feeds as advertising rates plunge ever-downward, as a godsend. Life was hard, but Facebook was a path. Strategizing about Facebook’s Instant Articles and new video initiatives became a primary management subject this past year at all forward-thinking media companies. Here was a solution. Here was the future.

Somehow, quite like the media’s ability to ignore the electoral anger that caused Trump and Brexit, it was also able to blindly ignore that Facebook’s interests were different from its own.

And when Facebook announced last week that it was going to downgrade news in the Facebook news feed in favor of personal ruminations and friend baby pics, there was, in Trump and Brexit fashion, a total “it can’t be” reaction from the media. Actually, it’s quite a development for the media not unlike Brexit for Britain. All of Britain’s assumption about its place in the modern economic world were founded on its EU membership. Likewise, the media’s assumption about how it would survive in a digital world were founded on a Facebook partnership. With it, life as we know it appears to end.

Things change....  Facebook's move to fulfill its ambition to be the personal "newspaper" for its billion-plus members is likely to mean more woes for the ailing news media. The huge social network has become a key source of news for many users, as part of a dramatic shift in how people get information in the digital age. Company founder Mark Zuckerberg told a forum in early November 2014 that his goal is to make Facebook's newsfeed "the perfect personalized newspaper for every person in the world." Zuckerberg said that while a newspaper provides the same information to every reader, Facebook can tailor its feed to the interests of the individual, delivering a mix of world news, community events and updates about friends or family.

Facebook changes mean you'll see even more friends' posts

This is not, as it happens, the first shoot-yourself-in-the-head mistake made by publishers in navigating the digital market. That original sin, so incomprehensible now as to be almost never discussed, was to give all of publishing’s products away for free. That happened because … well, really, for no other reason than that technology companies said this was the future and that everyone was doing it.

This too has pretty much been the singular logic in Facebook’s relationship with publishers. Give us your stuff because we are the future. And what choice do you have anyway, really? Facebook, aggregating the world’s population, had become, with Google, a duopoly volume seller of low-priced advertising, with an inventory so large it lowered, to heretofore unimaginable levels, the price of advertising for everybody else. This altered the publishing model from one of individually valued audiences to one of commodified, lowest-rate, eyeballs. In this new world, the amount of traffic that you had was your only meaningful differentiator. And the most efficient source of traffic for publishers was Facebook

Indeed, with publishers seeing Facebook as their primary outlet, there grew quite a new ethos here of seeing Facebook as the central news source. Hence, there was no choice. Gaming Facebook was a civic as well as commercial duty. BuzzFeed, the ultimate (for now) next-generation news product, was not principally a news company, but a company that could most efficiently access Facebook. This was the new news paradigm, spawning a news industry of Facebook consultants to media companies.

There were always signs that Facebook was unreliable, frequent algorithmic shifts that suddenly disrupted traffic patterns, or, worse, suddenly no traffic at all, and only opaque responses from Facebook executives. Hence, more consultants.

Facebook, for its part, went from quite an indifferent carrier to, in one of its many test-it-out experiments, actively courting news organizations. It seemed like another area of ad growth to monopolize. Publishers would be satellites to Facebook, and Facebook, piggy-backing on the respectability of news, would also take its cut of the ad revenue. Then there was video. In essence, Facebook got publishers to underwrite its new video ambitions.

Facebook denies censoring conservative news

And yet, there were wrinkles. Lower click-through levels for ads on its Instant Article product — people got too caught up in the articles. And worse, controversy! More or less liberal Facebook, accused of burying right-wing news. Worst of all, while Facebook had in fact become one of the largest sources of news for its users, its users didn’t actually want news; they wanted baby pics. And so, with perfect sangfroid, Facebook reversed its experiment. News would no longer be a top news feed feature. How irrelevant it would become is anyone’s guess.

Publishers, universally caught off guard, swooned and fainted.

The fault here, taking issue with the horror now being expressed by the news community, is not Facebook’s. Facebook, philosophically indifferent to news, is just tending its business. No, the fault is on the part of publishers who, against all reason, and without the wherewithal to imagine an alternative, embraced Facebook. Indeed, there is only one practical conclusion from the history of the publishing business' adaptation to digital: publishers, by sacrificing their independence, have lost their business.

Brexit may be relevant here besides just as another example of the media’s shock at developments it should have anticipated, but didn't. Rather, the media ought to Brexit Facebook. Since Facebook is going to turn its back on publishers, publishers ought to radically and unilaterally reject Facebook. Let Facebook go dark. Take back control, in the words of the Brexiteers. And don’t ever give it up again.

The fearful and quisling news media has, alas, no mechanism by which to speak with one voice or take a unified action. So our business, as we have known it, will perish. Less optimistically, it has already perished.

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