I use Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. All three have stopped using (for the most part) chronological feeds in favor of a "what you've missed/what you'll find most interesting in the past few days" feed.
The problem is: I'm finding that nowadays I almost rarely actually see posts from the day of when I'm looking at an application's feed. For instance, today I spent about 10 minutes on my lunch break scrolling through Instagram and I don't recall seeing a single post from today; all the posts were 2-5 days old.
I hate to say it but right now the best thing going for Snapchat and the main reason I actually use it is because they still show posts/snapchats in chronological order. If I want to stay up to date on friends, I just need to go through my Story feed.
It seems like for all other networks I either don't have the option at anymore to return to chronological order, or the setting never persists (looking at you, Facebook). I don't want to be required to go to specific friends' profiles on x/y/z networks just to see what's going on with them.
I feel that rather than this new movement improving my social networking activities, it's just bringing them down and wasting my time. I prefer to use social networks to see what's happening _right now_ and not what I missed two or some N days ago.
What true benefit is there to forcing this kind of feed on users? I'm certainly not experiencing any.
Some of the potential advantages (not always realized) for users:
- Based on your like/share/visit/interact history, certain people's content will be prioritized, because the algorithm thinks you like it
- You see these 'what you missed' posts, which is content from a friend that attained more likes/shares than usual, and theoretically represents 'gems' your friends produce. This allows popular content to bubble to the top, producing a feel of accomplished virality for the producer, and encouraging more engagement
Some of the advantages for the site operator:
- It encourages users to interact with content they actually like, to feed the algorithm's dataset and build a better profile of what everyone likes
- It destroys the expectation that all available content will be surfaced chronologically, obfuscating the true quantity of actual content on the user's timeline, thereby allowing a higher density of ads and other sponsored content to be displayed to the user