A new report from The New York Times reveals that Facebook wants to limit journalists and researchers’ access to CrowdTangle, a data analytics tool that allows users to search public social media posts. Facebook’s concern over the tool -- and the data it provides researchers -- is just the latest example of the company prioritizing its public image over data transparency or solutions to the platform’s rampant misinformation problem.
In a July 14 article, New York Times technology columnist Kevin Roose detailed an “internal battle over data transparency” at Facebook, centering around CrowdTangle -- a search tool acquired by Facebook in 2016 that allows researchers to look at the engagement on public Facebook and Instagram posts. (The tool also offers Twitter and Reddit data.) CrowdTangle is one of the few tools available that allows researchers to peer behind the curtain of what’s gaining traction on Facebook. But much to Facebook’s likely chagrin, what those researchers have found is that right-leaning pages (and misinformation) consistently dominate on the platform. These repeated findings have not been good for Facebook’s public image.