Facebook’s NPE launches Venue, a “second screen” app where selected well-known personalities will provide commentary and engage with fans during live events (Sarah Perez/TechCrunch)
Facebook tests Forecast, an app for making predictions about world events, like COVID-19

Image Credits:Ā Facebook
Forecast, a new project from Facebookās internal R&D group, NPE Team, isĀ launchingĀ today to build a community around predictions. The iOS app will allow users to ask questions and then use in-app points to make predictions about what might happen in the future. Users can also create, discuss and view these crowdsourced predictions.
At launch, only invited participants in the U.S. and Canada will be allowed to make predictions and engage in conversations while the app is in beta testing. But these predictions and related discussions will be publicly accessible on theĀ Forecast website, and made shareable.
Before today,Ā FacebookĀ Ā tested the product internally with a small set of employees. Their initial forecasts will form the initial core content in the app at launch.
Starting now, Facebook will invite members of the health, research and academic communities to make predictions about the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on the world.

Image Credits:Ā Facebook
At a time when Facebook and other major tech platforms are under fire for their role in aiding the spread of misinformation, fake news, propaganda, conspiracy theories and other non-factual content presented as truth, an app focused on making āguessesā about the future seems ill-advised ā however educated those guesses may be. This is particularly concerning because much of the appās content will focus on guesses about COVID-19.
Forecastās predictions may help show what people are thinking, but COVID-19 isnāt a game. To understand the world, scientists form a hypothesis, which is essentially an expanded form of an educated guess. But they donāt then crowdsource voting to determine if a hypothesis is true ā they test, experiment, gather supporting data, try to prove and disprove the hypothesis and ultimately aim to publish their findings and have them peer-reviewed.
The Forecast app turns the hypothesis into the end result, in a way. The app lets users make a forecast and explain their reasoning ā in other words, form a hypothesis. But instead of doing the work to test the forecast, through the application of the scientific method, Forecast will track theĀ votesĀ a given question receives.
For example:Ā āWhen will the first COVID-19 vaccine candidate begin phase 3 trials?āĀ orĀ āWhen will most U.S. residents be treated with a COVID-19 vaccine?āĀ In non-COVID questions, you may come across somethingĀ likeĀ āWill the US Presidential Election be fully or partially postponed?āĀ
Questions will be reviewed by the Forecast team and edited for clarity, if needed. Users will be notified if their question is published.
At some point, the question will be determined as āsettled,ā based on an elapsed time period or because an event has occurred. For instance, if users were guessing when a vaccine would be released, and then itās actually released, the questions around that topics would be āsettled.ā
Forecastās polls are given aesthetically pleasing charts and graphs, which can be shared outside the app. That means users could start posting these guesses and the crowdsourced responses to sites like Facebook, where the line between fact and fiction has already blurred. That could further complicate peopleās understanding of what is already a complex topic: the COVID-19 pandemic.
Facebook users who see these shared āforecastsā may believe they have some basis in science and research, when instead, they are the result of a social polling app.
Sarah Perez / TechCrunch:
Facebook’s NPE launches Venue, a āsecond screenā app where selected well-known personalities will provide commentary and engage with fans during live eventsĀ āĀ Facebook’s R&D group, NPE Team, is launching a new app for engaging fellow fans around live events, Venue.
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