"I saw it on ebonyFacebook" is a response uttered far too often by people that get their news via the social network.
And while that may seem like an innocuous answer, it's a major problem for publishers, who are dissociated for the stories they write when someone assumes that their news just comes from "Facebook."
But on Tuesday, Facebook is finally releasing a way to fix that.
SEE ALSO: What Facebook's most 'meaningful' Groups tell us about Zuckerberg's grand visionThe platform is now putting publishers' logos alongside articles in its Trending and Search sections, offering a bit of branding as context with the content on its platform.
That's just the beginning. Publisher logos will start appearing elsewhere on Facebook.
"To start, we are introducing these logo treatments exclusively for articles in Trending and Search, but the eventual goal is to extend these to all places where people consume news on our platform," wrote Andrew Anker, product manager at Facebook, in a blog post.
Publisher logos already show up in the News Feed on posts via Pages.
Facebook cited the change as a result of its ongoing discussion with media companies via its Facebook Journalism Project, an effort launched in the wake of widespread criticism following the 2016 election.
People who get their news on Facebook tend not to realize where that content comes from, removing important information for readers as well as hurting the ability for publishers to build their audience. A Pew Research Center report found that only about half of online news readers could name where they had read a story. On top of that, Facebook was named by readers as the source of the news almost as much as any other outlet.
"CNN was named at least once over the week by 14% of those who followed links, similar to the 12% who named Fox News and 10% who named Facebook, even though Facebook does not produce the news stories distributed on the site," Pew's report noted.
Logos will appear on desktop and mobile, as well as when users search for topics. Publishers will need to upload their logos.
The change is small, but it's a big deal for publishers that have a recognizable brand.
"The CNN branding is the first notification to the audience that they are going to get information from a trusted news source," said Samantha Barry, head of social media at CNN. "The bigger and bolder we can make those three red letters—no matter the platform—it’s something we are looking for and working with partners on. It benefits everyone to amplify credible news sources."
It's is another step in Facebook's recent embrace of publishers, adding to a growing willingness to pay for content as well as promote high-quality journalism. Facebook's outsized power—it drives more readers to content than any other part of the internet—has weighed on media outlets, which have grown impatient with the social network's changing demands and hesitancy to monetize its video operations.
Topics Facebook
Previous:Let’s Do It, Pruitt!
Next:State of the Unions
Flamengo vs. Esperance de Tunis 2025 livestream: Watch Club World Cup for freeWhen is Amazon Prime Day 2025? Official dates for the 4Nvidia and AMD Seriously Want to Offload CurrentWhat Ever Happened to Flickr?Why Ryzen Was Amazing and the Haters Were All WrongWhy you're seeing even more ads on WhatsAppWhat to expect from VidCon 2025How to unblock Pornhub for free in MississippiDual Booting: Windows and UbuntuExplainer: What is a File System?Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7 leak reveals possible new featuresHow to Activate God Mode in Windows 10 and Windows 115 Affordable LastGPU Availability and Pricing Update: March 2022We Bought the Cheapest DDR5 RAM Modules We Could Find, Are They Any Good?Verizon promo: Get the iPhone 16 Pro Max for free5 Ways to Connect Your Old Storage Devices to a New PCTest Driving the 2023 BMW iX M60: The most powerful electric vehicle from BMWInterview: What is it Like to Develop a Game in VR?Explainer: What is a File System? Berlin's Cybrothel fulfills a fantasy — but may pose risks What Louise Erdrich’s “The Blue Jay’s Dance” Taught Me About Motherhood How Hive Social became Twitter's newest rival Remembering David Lewiston, Who Recorded Music Around the World Now Online: Our Interviews with Claudia Rankine and Alasdair Gray Most popular Black Friday deals 2022: Mashable readers went the hardest for these items You, Too, Can Be T. S. Eliot’s Child. Just Give It a Try. Reimagining Jun’ichirō Tanizaki’s “The Key” As a Building 'The Marvels': is there a post 'The Marvels' extra special mid Protests sweep through FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Best Black Friday 2023 laptop deals at Walmart: Save up to $551 When Drummers Become Writers: The Strange Wisdom of Method Books Best TV soundbar deal: Amazon Fire TV Soundbar on sale for $99.99 In the Mosh Pit, Who Gets to Have Fun, and at Whose Expense? Paradox Formation: Anelise Chen’s Meditations on the Snail Five Limericks (in the Style of Edward Lear) Apple enables Spatial Video recording in iOS 17.2 beta Babeland Black Friday sale: Get up to 70% off sex toys, lube, and more A New Photo Book Lingers Between Baseball and the American Dream