3 things Facebook needs to do in 2017

Facebook recently enjoyed its 14th straight quarter of beating earnings expectations. The company has only missed earnings one time since it went public in 2012. Its stock (FB) is up 14% this year and its mobile ad business is so massively successful that its revenue last quarter, $5.7 billion, was more than Facebook’s entire revenue one year before.

The company is flying high and doing a lot right. But there’s still room for improvement. Here are the changes Facebook must make in 2017 to continue its great success.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (AP)
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (AP)

Handle its fake news problem

According to a May report from Pew Research Center, 62% of American adults now get their news from social media—maybe not all of their news, but at least some portion of it. And 66% of Facebook users say they get news on Facebook. That 66% portion translates to a staggering 44% of the entire US adult population. Think about that: 44% of US adults use Facebook as a news source.

That means that for all intents and purposes, Facebook has become a media company—yes, it’s a distributor of news, not a creator, but once you are a destination people turn to for news, you must reckon with that role and the ethical questions and responsibilities therein.

Facebook, of course, would prefer not to deal with those questions. At a conference earlier this year, when directly pressed on whether Facebook is a media company, COO Sheryl Sandberg said, “Facebook’s a platform for all ideas and it’s really core to our mission that people can share what they care about on Facebook.” Answers like that are beginning to look comical.

And after the US presidential election, Facebook can no longer practice the same misdirection when asked those questions. The influence of fake or misleading news posts shared in the Facebook news feed has been a major focus in the wake of the election. Using Facebook effectively also proved to be a key tactic for the candidates. (New York Magazine put it more bluntly than most, with the headline “Donald Trump won because of Facebook.”) CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who initially said it was “extremely unlikely” that fake news had an impact on the election, has at last begun to change his tune.

Facebook announced last week that it will begin “doing our part to address the issue of fake news and hoaxes,” testing a new feature, in partnership with five news organizations initially (Politifact, Snopes, FactCheck.org, ABC News and the AP), that allows users to flag a story as fake or misleading. If enough people flag a story, it will go to these outlets to verify. If the outlets deem it fake, a dialogue box will appear to users when they try to share those stories to their own pages. (Just this week, in a live video chat with Sandberg, Zuckerberg said Facebook is “not a traditional technology company” and “not a traditional media company,” but acknowledged that the social network is an “important part of public discourse.”)