Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Rage Induced by the Machine


I don't really use Facebook anymore. It's an open tab and an app on my phone, so I check it periodically out of habit, but it's not part of my basic rotation.

I'm a millennial, so I started using Facebook in college, when it was limited to college. I didn't at all mind it expanding to "everyone" -- hey, I was graduating too -- and for quite some time it did exactly what I wanted it to do: served as a convenient vector to keep up with friends who had flung themselves around the country. And that would still be a nice use today -- I'd love to know what people are up to these days. So many cute babies!

But alas, these days Facebook is essentially worthless. No, that's too tame -- it's actively malignant. When I open Facebook, it defaults to an algorithmic feed that maybe shows an actual friend's post once in every half a dozen. The majority of posts are either AI slop history lessons or, more often, polarizing political ragebait. The irony is there isn't a clear side to the ragebait, though for me it's mostly Israel- and antisemitism related. But it's invariably someone angry about something and expressing their position in the most inflammatory way possible. Every time I click through to read more, I feel myself becoming a worse person.

And that's not even the bottom of the pit. God help me if I read comments. Even on the rare occasion I get a basically neutral news article or press release, the comments are just full of people being their absolute worst selves. In the wake of the San Diego shooting, here are some of the comment categories that stood out to me as repeated themes:

  • On posts by Jews or Jewish institutions condemning the shooting, ostensibly Jewish people blasting the condemnation because Muslims have it coming and Jews should never defend them even from terrorist violence.
  • On posts about how the shooter harbored antisemitic views, non-Jewish people blasting Jews for "making it all about you" (what?).
  • On any post by anyone, saying this all traces back to Israel.
Again, these were not isolates -- these were categories. I'd see comment after comment like this. The inescapable feeling was grief, anger, and despair over how awful my fellow humans are. It took effort to remind myself that this is not in fact all humans, it is a very limited and non-representative subset. But it was, again, damaging me to keep reading these. When one is swamped with instances of people being terrible, it makes you more terrible too. Even though I know that most people's responses to San Diego shooting are normal, it hacks your brain into thinking that this is how the world is.

That's what Facebook is these days -- an algorithmic machine that tries its level best to make people the worst versions of themselves because that sort of person will engage more. Such a price would be too much to pay even if Facebook was useful as a catch-up tool with old friends -- which it isn't.

And sure, to some extent this is a problem with all social media. But not like this. I actually like Bluesky, and Reddit has been decent since I stay away from politics. Facebook really seems to be in a category of its own (perhaps along with X/Twitter, which I don't use at all anymore) in terms of the intensity with which it pushes awful messaging.

(It's one saving grace right now is that my reel algorithm is mostly handing me standup comedy clips from comedians I actually like. But to by honest, I suspect most of those clips are stolen bot reposts -- not the least because they're increasingly cutting off before the actual joke gets told. Even when you find something good, Facebook finds a way to make it awful).

5 comments:

Maggie said...

I haven't used Facebook in years. Nothing good there. I've noticed plenty of bots or instigators on Bluesky. Kind of sad, but there's the block button.

Alex I. said...

Have you read Cory Doctorow's "Enshittification"? I think it pretty well covers how the big tech platforms (really all of them to some degree, but Facebook is kind of an outlier in its shittiness) have degraded over time.

The part about Facebook that doesn't make sense is that a lot of it doesn't even seem to be monetized. Like I don't know that the world's worst political takes are paying for placement, especially since they don't seem to have ads expressly attached to them. But a lot of it is even worse than that-- like my reels will also have an occasional short comedy clip (missing the punchline) that is also not infrequently funny if I happen to catch it, but it's mostly... America's Funniest Home Videos style reels of people falling, and also AI slop depicting cars driving off of giant ramps and falling down mountains. Not sure who or what is trying to monetize that, but I can't imagine it's effective...

Marni Jane said...

I have a very similar feed to you re:Jewish stuff and I’m also in the millennial age range. It’s something I’ve noticed and am concerned by. It’s caused serious problems with my engagement with the local Jewish community as federation members share hot takes from jinfluencers like that horseshit’s worth reading and my own rabbi full on regurgitated right wing conspiracy theories for an hour regarding immigrants. I admit I’m flummoxed you think Reddit is good. Go take a gander at the Jewish subs. Yeesh.

Unknown said...

I agree that its an absolute cesspool of algorithmic rage-bait slop. However, a small suggestion. You can have it default to chronological feed by adding ?sk=h_chr to the end of the link, and it will be your friends and groups and others you follow, plus an occasional ad. It is a much better experience (though you may find how surprisingly little your friends are posting these days).

https://www.facebook.com/?sk=h_chr

Unknown said...

Add `?sk=h_chr` to the end of facebook link to force it to do chronological mode. Better experience (and don't use the app, use a browser; the app is malware at best)