Facebook Shuttered Team Researching Social Media Addiction
But “had” is the keyword, here. According to internal documents by the Wall Street Journal, Facebook shut down the team in 2019.
Worse, the team appears to have been on the cusp of making major suggestions that could have benefited users—at the cost of time spent on the platform, which is crucial to Facebook’s ability to earn revenue.

(Photo: Brett Jordan/Unsplash)
Anyone familiar with the scientific method will tell you correlation isn’t causation—as will Facebook itself, whose parent company, Meta, WSJ‘s interpretation of its research. But Facebook’s correlation with unhealthy social media use isn’t exactly hopeful. It also isn’t comforting in the face of Facebook’s recent , during which Zuckerburg has publicly aimed at blurring the lines between the “real” world and the virtual world by a metaverse.
Facebook’s internal documents reveal that the company knew its platform was more frequently associated with addictive use than other virtual experiences, including Reddit, YouTube, and World of Warcraft. Whistleblower Frances Haugen spoke just last month about how Facebook is to reward controversial (and sometimes, downright hateful) content due to the way its algorithms favor engagement above all else. One of Facebook’s subsidiaries, Instagram, was also found this year to have a uniquely poor on its users thanks to its algorithms and user interface.
Despite this, the company has only made half-hearted attempts at improving its platform to address these issues. It added a time-management tool to its mobile app in 2018, as well as a “quiet mode” that muted push notifications in 2020. But the latter feature was hidden among the app’s settings, and Facebook’s algorithms still push unsavory content to the top of users’ news feeds. Facebook recently an outside attempt at helping people curb overuse of the app, so it’s unlikely that we’ll see any real strides toward user well-being in the near future.
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