Meta’s New Year’s Resolution: Fewer Mistakes, More Speech

Meta announced three updates to its content policies: Community Notes replace fact-checking, speech restrictions ease, and political content gets a personalized touch.
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Today, Mark Zuckerberg announced that Meta is refocusing on free speech across its platforms—Facebook, Instagram and Threads. 

There are three major changes that will take place across Meta’s content policies and systems. Here’s what you need to know:

1. Community Notes to Replace Fact Checks

Meta is ending its third-party fact-checking program in the U.S., replacing it with Community Notes—a system where users can add context to posts, similar to the approach used on X. 

Here’s the idea: instead of fact-checkers deciding what’s true, users from all sides of the debate can contribute notes that add context to potentially misleading posts. The goal? Less bias, fewer arguments about censorship, and more “let people figure it out for themselves.” 

Community Notes will roll out in the U.S. soon, and Meta says they’ll stay out of the way, letting users write and rate the notes.

2. More Speech, Fewer Filters

Meta’s dialing back its content rules, especially on topics like immigration and gender identity—basically, things people love to debate. Automated systems will still tackle the big violations like fraud and scams, but smaller violations won’t be flagged unless someone reports them.

By focusing less on trivial content and publishing reports on moderation mistakes, they’re aiming for fewer people getting shadow-banned over harmless posts. Expect to see these changes take effect in the coming weeks.

3. Political Content: You Decide What Shows Up

Since 2021, Meta has been toning down political content in your feed. But now, it’s going personalized. If you want more political content, you’ll get it. If you’re still recovering from election season, you can keep it low-key. Meta’s rolling out new options to tweak how much civic content you see. And if all else fails, you can always reset your algorithm

These changes mark a shift in how Meta manages the chaos of billions of posts. Whether they clean things up or stir the pot remains to be seen—but at least you can add your notes now.

What’s your take on these changes? Share your thoughts here

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About the Author

Meet Vanessa Bowman, senior editor at BAM. Combining her background in elementary education and journalism, Vanessa has been crafting content for the real estate industry since 2017. From BAM blogs to ebooks, courses, and everything in between, she brings a unique perspective to her work. But her favorite part? Collaborating with BAM's incredible creators and contributors to bring fresh and exciting ideas to life.

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