
Prune your notifications as they come inĮvery time you get a notification on Facebook, whether on desktop or mobile, there’s a subtle option to train Facebook to stop bothering you. However, if you keep the site open in a tab on your computer, or if you check the app often, these notifications can add to the noise.įortunately, there are a number of ways to prune the notification spam, each progressively more drastic. A comment on one of your posts might get pushed to your phone, but the 20th “like” on that post might not result in a buzz in your pocket. Facebook sometimes chooses which notifications deserve your immediate attention, leaving others for the next time you open the app. This appeared to be little more than an advertisement for Facebook Games, the company’s competitor to the game-streaming service Twitch.Īnd that’s just push notifications. Someone - anyone - is streaming a video game. Seventeen friends said they were going to one event, but I got notifications for only two - one from my girlfriend and another from someone I never interact with. Someone I’m friends with confirmed that she was going to an event I am interested in.

Someone is interested in an event I’m also interested in.

Someone I don’t know posted in a group I’m in. Someone liked one of my posts or comments. In just my own experience, I’ve received notifications when: The uptick in notification spam has been well- documented. Instead, the company is focusing on engaging the users it already has, largely by pestering them with an endless stream of notifications. With over two billion active users, it’s hard for Facebook to grow much more by adding new people. As Facebook’s notifications get increasingly aggressive, you have to fight back even harder to reclaim some peace and quiet. Not everyone can quit Facebook, but “not quitting” doesn’t mean you want to spend all day on the site.
