Facebook will now let users hide people from its “On This
Day” feature, avoiding people being notified about posts they were part
of with their exes or dead relatives.
The On This Day tool picks up posts on the site from times
past — a picture from exactly a year ago, for instance, or an update
that was posted five years ago. But it does so indiscriminately, showing
everything from a certain day including if those memories are upsetting
or sad.
The reminders appear without
prompting at the top of the news feed,
so there’s no way of knowing when logging in if the site is going to
show something — whether good or bad.
But the site now offers the option to choose a date or a person that
is associated with bad memories, and then have them filtered out. Users
can head to the special page for On This Day, select “Settings” and
search for a person or a date range that they don’t want to hear about.
The feature can be turned off entirely on the same page — by choosing notifications and turning them off.
“Your memories are yours, so you should control which ones you see in
On This Day,” the page reads. “Memories include things like your posts
and others' posts you're tagged in, major life events and when you
became friends with someone on Facebook. Use these filters to help make
sure we show you memories from On This Day in a way that's meaningful
for you.”
When choosing a person, Facebook tells users that it will “filter
posts those people are tagged in so they shouldn't show in On This Day”.
It reminds users that they can completely unfriend or block someone if
they’d rather not hear about them at all — since filtering them out in
On This Day will only silence them in that section, not in the News Feed
or anywhere else.
Facebook’s On This Day feature is just one of a range of online services
intended to help people feel nostalgic. Others include Timehop, which
pulls in information from various social networks and dredges it back up
at relevant times, and Google Photos can compile pictures from
important days and bring them back up years later.
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
Facebook makes its most controversial feature slightly kinder
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