Instagram Co-Founders Launch Personalized News App 'Artifact' (techcrunch.com) 15
Artifact, the personalized news reader built by Instagram's co-founders, is now open to the public, no sign-up required. TechCrunch reports: With today's launch, Artifact is dropping its waitlist and phone number requirements, introducing the app's first social feature and adding feedback controls to better personalize the news reading experience, among other changes. [...] With today's launch, Artifact will now give users more visibility into their news reading habits with a newly added stats feature that shows you the categories you've read as well as the recent articles you read within those categories, plus the publishers you've been reading the most. But it will also group your reading more narrowly by specific topics. In other words, instead of just "tech" or "AI," you might find you've read a lot about the topic "ChatGPT," specifically.
In time, Artifact's goal is to provide tools that would allow readers to click a button to show more or less from a given topic to better control, personalize and diversify their feed. In the meantime, however, users can delve into settings to manage their interests by blocking or pausing publishers or selecting and unselecting general interest categories. Also new today is a feature that allows you to upload your contacts in order to see a signal that a particular article is popular in your network. This is slightly different from Twitter's Top Articles feature, which shows you articles popular with the people you follow, because Artifact's feature is more privacy-focused.
"It doesn't tell you who read it. It doesn't tell you how many of them read it, so it keeps privacy -- and we clearly don't do it with just one read. So you can't have one contact and like figure out what that one contact is reading ... it has to meet a certain minimum threshold," notes [Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom]. This way, he adds, the app isn't driven by what your friends are reading, but it can use that as a signal to highlight items that everyone was reading. In time, the broader goal is to expand the social experience to also include a way to discuss the news articles within Artifact itself. The beta version, limited to testers, offers a Discover feed where users can share articles and like and comment on those shared by others. There's a bit of a News Feed or even Instagram-like quality to engaging with news in this way, we found.
In time, Artifact's goal is to provide tools that would allow readers to click a button to show more or less from a given topic to better control, personalize and diversify their feed. In the meantime, however, users can delve into settings to manage their interests by blocking or pausing publishers or selecting and unselecting general interest categories. Also new today is a feature that allows you to upload your contacts in order to see a signal that a particular article is popular in your network. This is slightly different from Twitter's Top Articles feature, which shows you articles popular with the people you follow, because Artifact's feature is more privacy-focused.
"It doesn't tell you who read it. It doesn't tell you how many of them read it, so it keeps privacy -- and we clearly don't do it with just one read. So you can't have one contact and like figure out what that one contact is reading ... it has to meet a certain minimum threshold," notes [Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom]. This way, he adds, the app isn't driven by what your friends are reading, but it can use that as a signal to highlight items that everyone was reading. In time, the broader goal is to expand the social experience to also include a way to discuss the news articles within Artifact itself. The beta version, limited to testers, offers a Discover feed where users can share articles and like and comment on those shared by others. There's a bit of a News Feed or even Instagram-like quality to engaging with news in this way, we found.
app (Score:1)
Well, I'm not installing an app to read news on a phone or tablet. Looks like I'm gonna miss out on yet another social media craze, bummer.
Re: (Score:2)
We have been promised News Aggregators for decades, all offering to help you find information that best matches your interests. Even Slashdot could be grouped into the news aggregator category with its promise of News for Nerds. I don't imagine Artifact will do much better than previous attempts. Best News Aggregators [lifewire.com]
Re:app (but different) (Score:2)
I can think of different ways of getting the "smart content analysis" client-side in an effective manner, but Artifact seems to do an adequate job as an entrant into this space. So far, I'm OK with how it looks and works -- despite UX p
Re: (Score:2)
You're okay with installing an app that gets things like your device identifier, your phone number, your contacts, and likely a lot more?
Just another piece of spyware with the goal of selling you out.
Re: (Score:2)
You're okay with installing an app that gets things like your device identifier, your phone number, your contacts, and likely a lot more?
Just another piece of spyware with the goal of selling you out.
Well, I do access the Internet. And I did pay for a mobile phone (and service) with a credit card. And I am a registered citizen to a country on planet Earth. I have friends (I think). I fill out paperwork (both on paper and digitally). And I'm sure that CCTV systems have detected my precise location at certain times while I interact with society -- and use my phone for contactless payment.
But, I bag my own groceries -- so I guess Big Bad Corps don't track me ALL of the time. (Although they do know what i
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, well, I'm not giving up my contacts and other info to some random company(ies) so that I can get News recommendations.
Can it block Woke rubbish? (Score:1, Troll)
Can it do it ?
Re: (Score:1)
Simple requirement.
You worldview is too fragile to be exposed to things like reason, logic and fact?
You have far more issues than whether or not your chosen echo chamber can remain intact
Re: (Score:2)
And I want to read news based on facts, like CNN used to be, not news based on opinions, like CNN became.
You should remember one thing (Score:3)
The last time anyone gave their personal information to these guys, the guys turned around and sold it to Mark Zuckerberg. So trusting anything they claim about preserving or protecting your privacy is laughable.
All lefty sources (Score:2)
Oh and no Slashdot, just garbage like Gizmodo.