National

Is Facebook kicking people out of groups? Kind of — here’s what to do about it

Have you been kicked out of a Facebook group recently?

The group administrator may not be out to get you, after all, it appears.

Facebook help forums are overflowing with complaints from both group admins and former members who say Facebook is behind the unceremonious mass group ouster.

Many of the frustrated users wonder if a “glitch” is to blame, but it’s actually a new Facebook policy, according to Social Media Today. And according to that policy update, Facebook would quibble with using the phrase “kicked out” to describe what’s going on.

The actual policy change is that Facebook has removed users’ ability to directly add their friends to groups, instead allowing for friends to invite their friends into groups. As a result, the invited member is not to be counted among a group’s members until he or she visits the group page and accepts the invitation. Until then, they are placed on a list of “invited” potential members.

Before, the policy change notes, “some people may have been added to your group, but have never visited it.”

Well, now retroactively, those people who were added to a group by a friend and who have passively just viewed the group’s content in their news feed without ever visiting the group’s page are also being moved to those groups’ “invited” lists. It has resulted in the member rolls of groups all over Facebook being cut down to size, and group admins are concerned that the former members may not have any clue why they’ve been moved to the invited list or what to do about it.

That’s why “kicked out” is exactly the terminology that Internet fact-checking site Snopes used when they judged the rumor that “Facebook is kicking people out of groups who don’t participate,” to be “mostly true.” To the individual Facebook user, and to the Facebook group administrator, it appears that group memberships are declining.

It should be noted, though, that the move to the “invited” list only happens for those users who have never visited the group page or interacted with any of its content, so, theoretically, all it would have taken is one “like” on one cute photo, or one comment on one post along the way to ensure that you’re still a member of your groups, and haven’t been moved to “invited” status.

Users will want to check the groups that they belong to before Feb. 10. The new group membership policy went into effect the week of Jan. 13, according to Snopes, and users who have been placed in groups’ “invited” lists will get 28 days to decide whether to accept or decline the invitation on the group Facebook page, before the invitation expires and the group’s content no longer appears in the users’ feeds.

Facebook group admins can also remind users, within that 28-day window, to respond to their group invite.

This story was originally published January 22, 2019 at 9:37 AM.

Matthew Martinez
mcclatchy-newsroom
Matt is an award-winning real time reporter and a University of Texas at Austin graduate who’s been based at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram since 2011. His regional focus is Texas, and that makes sense. He’s only lived there his whole life.
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