Technology

Facebook users report celebrity spam flooding their feeds

In this article

Facebook users complained of an issue that saw random comments made to celebrity Pages appear in their own Feed.
Olivier Douliery | Afp | Getty Images

Facebook parent Meta confirmed Wednesday an issue with the company’s Feed after numerous users reported problems with spam from celebrity pages.

“We’re aware that some people are having trouble with their Facebook Feed. We’re working to get things back to normal as quickly as possible and we apologise for any inconvenience,” a spokesperson for Meta told CNBC.

In an updated statement, a Meta spokesperson said a “configuration change caused some people to have trouble with their Facebook Feed.” The spokesperson added that the issues have been resolved.

Downdetector, a service where people can log problems and outages with websites, had thousands of reports of issues with Facebook, with 81% of complaints related to the Feed.

A number of users commenting on Downdetector and Twitter reported an issue where they would see comments posted by random people on celebrity accounts appearing on their own Feed. CNBC also witnessed the issue when checking the Feed earlier Wednesday.

The Facebook Feed is the main stream of posts of people that you follow.

Meta’s properties last had major issues in October when users were unable to access Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger for several hours. That was caused by backend changes that caused “issues” that interrupted the flow of traffic between routers in Facebook’s data centers around the world, Facebook said.

The social media giant has not elaborated on the reason for the latest glitch.

Articles You May Like

In the EV future, Thailand, the ‘Detroit of Asia,’ could be a key China hedge for automakers
Microsoft signs deal with Swedish partner to remove 3.3 million metric tons of carbon dioxide
U.S. crude oil recovers losses after surprise stockpile decline
Exxon CEO says dispute with Chevron over Hess Guyana oil assets could drag into 2025
Oil prices hold firm amid confusion over status of Gaza cease-fire proposal