The Secret Algorithm That Controls What 270 Million Americans Read Every Day
One algorithm in Menlo Park controls what 270 million Americans read daily. It was optimized for anger. Inflammatory content spreads 6x faster than accurate content. Nobody voted on this.
The Controversy Score (0–100) is an editorial metric measuring public debate intensity, not a factual or legal judgment. Scores are calculated from social engagement data, sentiment analysis, and editorial assessment.
There is an algorithm running on servers in Menlo Park, California, that determines what 270 million Americans read, watch, and discuss every single day. It was not voted on. It was not debated in Congress. It was built by a 28-year-old engineer to maximize a metric called “meaningful social interaction” — and it accidentally became one of the most powerful editorial forces in human history.
How It Works
Facebook’s content algorithm prioritizes posts that generate strong emotional reactions — specifically anger and outrage. Internal research, leaked in the 2021 Facebook Papers, showed the company knew that “content that triggers anger is more engaging” and continued to optimize for it anyway.
The result: inflammatory content spreads 6x faster than accurate content on the platform, according to MIT research published in Science magazine.
The Scale Is Staggering
Pew Research found that 48% of Americans get news primarily from social media. Of that group, 71% cannot correctly identify the original source of news stories they read. They remember the post, not the publisher.
Who Is Accountable
Under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, Meta bears no legal responsibility for the content its algorithm amplifies. The company is legally equivalent to a phone company that has no liability for what people say on calls — except it actively curates and prioritizes content based on emotional manipulation potential.
“Section 230 was written for bulletin boards in 1996,” one tech policy attorney told TrendEdge. “It was not written for a machine that actively selects what 270 million people see every morning.”