Facebook videos will now automatically play sound by default
Facebook announced a suite of new changes to its video platform today,
including a new setting that will autoplay videos with the sound turned
on by default. This change means that, if your phone is not set to
silent and you haven’t disabled the feature in Facebook’s mobile
settings panel, every video in the News Feed will have audio fading in
as you scroll past it. The switch from muting videos by default follows a
multi-month testing period that first surfaced last August.
The change raises all sorts of questions, like whether
unsuspecting Facebook users will be caught scrolling through the News
Feed at a meeting or in class. “Well a few years ago when we started
autoplay it was very new to people,” Rose said in response to potential
pitfalls. “Now they’re pretty conscious” of how it works, he added. (In
other words, make sure you set your phone to vibrate if you’re trying to
sneak a peek at your feed in a sensitive situation.) Facebook says the
feature can be turned off by toggling the “Videos in News Feed Start
With Sound” option in the settings panel.
The company hopes that by turning on sound automatically,
it can keep more users engaged for longer with video content on its
platform. For the past couple of years, Facebook has been transforming
its social network into a destination for video, both recorded and live
streamed. Video is now a core focus of the company, dominating how it
invests resources into new features and controlling every facet of the
main app’s design, from the camera to the share option.
By autoplaying videos by default, and now by turning the
sound on, Facebook is trying to further reframe the context of how
people use its app. For instance, everyone expects a YouTube video to
play on its own, with the sound turned on, when they click an
appropriate link. Facebook would like its users to think of video on its
platform in much the same way, where opening the app is as more of an
audio and visual experience than one governed by text, photos, and
links. The company, however, has to reckon with how its vision for the
platform competes with the reality of how users prefer to use it.
The article was published on : theverge
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