![]() First click on the sharing button (mine says “ Custom” but yours might say “ Friends” and hopefully not “ Public”).Ģ. You can do this when you are sharing a status, link, photo or whatever.ġ. Optionally, if you prefer not to share with your acquaintances, you can limit the audience of your status updates. Limit what your Acquaintances see when you share If you don’t see it, click “More” or “Feeds”. On mobile, click “More” in the bottom-right of the app, then scroll down to Feeds and choose Acquaintances. You can find the feed on the left side of the page on desktop. And you can still see their updates if you visit their profile, or click on the Acquaintances list feed. In my experience, using the Acquaintances list greatly reduces the number of posts you’ll see from a friend. I say most because Facebook decides what you see and what you don’t see. Once done, you’ll no longer see MOST of your friend’s updates on your News Feed. Click the “ Friends” button and you’ll see the following choices appear: Unfriend, Unfollow, or Edit Friends Lists. In the Facebook app, first go to your friend’s timeline. Mobile version (using the Facebook app on a mobile device):ġ. You’ll now see an icon next to the word “Friends”, which indicates that this friend is on your Acquaintances list. Hover over the Friends button and choose “ Acquaintances”. Go to your friend’s timeline page by clicking on their name.Ģ. On the Desktop version (viewing Facebook in a web browser on your computer):ġ. Here’s how to add a friend to your Acquaintances list (so you’ll see fewer of their annoying posts.) The nice thing about these lists is that your friend will NOT know if you have added them into one of these lists. Use the Restricted list for friends who can only see posts and profile info you make public.Use the Acquaintances list for friends who should show up less in News Feed.Use the Close Friends list for friends who should show up more in News Feed. ![]() Facebook gives your three ready-made lists. What is a Facebook List?įacebook lists are an “optional way to organize friends so you can control what you see in your News Feed and post updates to specific people”. (This is an alternative to the information found here for “ Distancing yourself from a Facebook friend without Unfriending”). You’ll still share your updates with these friends if you choose, but you also have an easy way to restrict sharing on a case-by-case basis. Here’s an updated method for keeping someone’s updates off your news feed. You like this friend and want to stay in touch, but you’re just not interested in every single detail of their daily life. We all have those friends – the ones that post status updates continuously throughout the day, overwhelming your news feed with pictures of their breakfast croissant, pictures of their dogs, their grocery list, and the latest viral videos.
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