By Joseph Lichterman, Nieman Lab
Google on Tuesday launched a redesigned desktop version of Google News that introduces a more streamlined design, highlights fact checking and offers users additional personalization.
Google News’ desktop site is now broken into three main sections: Headlines, which features the day’s top news stories; Local, which allows users to follow news from certain locations; and For You, which contains specific topics a user has said they’re interested in. The redesign also introduces a card-based interface that is less cluttered than the previous iteration of Google News. The new layout is meant to highlight publisher titles, article labels, and offers more prominence to video. Users can also expand the cards to show more coverage on a certain topic.
Google News product manager Anand Paka said users often found the previous version of Google News too cluttered and confusing.
“Our goal here was to make every frequent task and every user need smooth and frictionless so they are connected to the news and journalism, which is why they come to Google News — to read the news and find out what’s going on,” Paka said in an interview. “To give them that multitude of facts, voices, and perspectives, you want the UI to disappear and not be a sense of overload or cognitive load on them but just be transparent.”
Google News is also introducing a fact-check widget on the right side of its homepage that more prominently displays stories from fact-checking sites such as PolitiFact and Snopes. (Though you’ll probably have to scroll a bit to reach it.) For now, the Fact Check addition is only available in the United States, but Google says it plans to roll it out more widely soon.
While Facebook has borne the brunt of controversy around fake news in the wake of the 2016 election, Google has also come under repeated scrutiny for promoting dubious stories in search and news results.