Md Jahidur Rahman's profile

Information, "difficult to refresh" is a virtue

Fragmented information, "difficult to refresh" is a virtue
Artifact's information flow He Tuber selects popular articles from leading media, niche blogs, etc. Click on the content you are interested in, and then it will "guess you like" and push similar stories to you.

There is a small threshold for "Guess You Like It" - reading more than 10 articles. Artifact will also help you count the quantity thoughtfully, and then tell you which level you are at. If you read more than 250 articles, you are considered a top user at the top of the pyramid. When I clicked on a few articles related to mental health, it started pushing related content to me all at once.

At the same time, Artifact's algorithm pays more attention to the time and progress you stay on each article to serve your personal in-depth reading, rather than allocating traffic to the content with the most clicks and comments to cater to the reading preferences of most people.

If you turn on the "Full Page Reading" mode, you can remove advertisements and other irrelevant information on the original web page, making the reading experience more refreshing and immersive.

This also means that it is anti-commercial. Readers feel better, but no one reads the ads, and personal browsing traces are harder to track.
Led by algorithms, Artifact does not forget to intervene in human judgment.
The sources that appear here are carefully selected by the Artifact team and meet their subjective standards for content.

At the same time, important news should be visible to everyone, so the top of each topic category is reserved for headlines.
For example, "The International Monetary Fund says AI will affect about 40% of global jobs" under the "AI" category collects 18 reports to allow readers to understand this information more deeply and systematically.

If the algorithm recommendation makes you feel that it is nothing more than that, Artifact's other AI functions are based on the pulse of the times.

One is the summary function based on GPT-4, which helps you summarize the content of the article in a variety of styles to save reading time - a regular three-paragraph style, an emoji style like "Mars writing", a simple style that is friendly to 5-year-olds, and literary talent. The brilliant but wordy poetry style, the Gen Z style that laughs and curses online...
The quality of the three-part summary is actually quite good. It grasps the key points and does not make up random things. However, sometimes it makes people wonder, is there really a need for other summaries that are neither useful nor useful?

If I didn't tell you, you might not guess. The following emoji summary is about the American Critics' Choice Awards awarding the "Best Song" to "I'm Just Ken" from "Barbie", performed by Commander Gao's puzzled expression came out of the circle.
The other is the AI ​​function that kills headlines. Users can long-press an article that appears in the information stream to report that an article is not on topic and that too many people have reported it. When this article is displayed in the information stream, the title will use GPT-4. Rewrite.

The AI-rewritten title will only appear in the information stream, with an asterisk appearing next to it to remind users that this is not the original title. If they click into the article, they will still see the original title and text.
AI rewritten title (top) and original title (bottom).

The Artifact team discovered an interesting phenomenon—more users are opposed to clickbait than they thought.
Information, "difficult to refresh" is a virtue
Published:

Information, "difficult to refresh" is a virtue

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