Facebook gets smart with friends

Facebook has introduced “smart lists” — functionality that automatically sorts your friends into categories and prioritises news from those dearest to you.

The rollout of smart lists starts today and comes as rival Google+ seeks to win over users by providing sharing in “circles” that mirror real-world social groups such as family, friends, and co-workers.

No ad to show here.

“This is really something we have been working on for four years,” says Facebook director of product management Blake Ross. “We think this is the way people will make lists going forward,” he continued.

On Facebook’s official blog, Ross announces two other improvements to Facebook’s friends management apart from the new smart list:

  • Close Friends and Acquaintances lists – You can see your best friends’ photos and posts in one place, and see less from people you’re not as close to.
  • Better suggestions – You can add the right friends to your lists without a lot of effort.

Facebook began in 2007 letting members individually sort friends into lists for targeted sharing of comments, photos and other digitised snippets of life.

The new smart lists feature spares Facebook users the tedium of creating lists by automatically putting friends into groups, with the first four categories being work, school, family and city.

“It is silly for you to spend a Saturday afternoon categorising your friends on Facebook,” Ross said. “We want to make it as easy as possible to organise your friends.”

Smart lists are created and updated based on information people consent to share with friends on Facebook, according to Ross.

“Smart lists take all the pain out of organising friends on Facebook,” Ross said, noting that the feature was optional. “You can always add to or remove people from a smart list after Facebook makes a recommendation.”

Smart lists start out by mining profiles of friends to figure out details such as ages or colleges attended to create lists of likely current or former classmates.

The city category will categorise by designated regions, since friends who live near one another might reside in different towns.

Facebook will also let each member create a list of people who are “closer to them than anyone else in the world,” according to Ross.

News from friends in that list is given high-priority delivery. People can also get separate Facebook news feeds based on lists.

“I think my friends love me, but I don’t know if they want to hear about my baby every time it takes another step,” Ross said.

“This lets people take slices of life and share them with different audiences,” he continued.

Facebook will also let members list “acquaintances” whose posts they don’t want to see very often.

“Facebook is used by more than 750 million people worldwide, and just like in the real world you are friends with a diverse group of people,” Blake said.

“We heard from users that it is hard to talk to all these people at one time, and maybe harder to hear from them at one time,” he added.

Further improvements include better suggestions for the smart lists, which will help the user to update and create their lists more intuitively. Each list will also be tied into a news feed that displays all relevant information which applies to the friends list. Sharing is made easier by selecting the friends list from dropdown audience selector.

Facebook last month announced other improvements aimed at letting users be more selective about who gets to see what they post at the social network.

The moves follow the successful launch of an online social network by Internet titan Google. Google+ social network has won legions of fans by allowing people to share content based on which “circles” friends fall into.

Google is a latecomer to social networking but its new site, Google+, has grown rapidly to more than 10 million members since its launch on June 28 although questions have been raised recently as to how active its users are.

In unveiling Google+, Google stressed the ability it gives users to separate online friends and family into different “Circles,” or networks, and to share information only with members of a particular circle.

One of the criticisms of Facebook has been that updates are shared with all of one’s friends unless a user has gone through a relatively complicated process to create separate Facebook Groups.

While Google+ may be the fastest-growing social network ever, it remains to be seen whether it can pose a serious threat to the social networking titan Facebook.

Google has a billion users worldwide that could be drawn into the California-based internet giant’s social network.

No ad to show here.

More

News

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest in digital insights. sign up

Welcome to Memeburn

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest in digital insights.

Exit mobile version