A week or so ago, Facebook announced changes to the news feed algorithm, trying to surface better shared content to users.
Facebook
said they have made an "update to News Feed ranking recognizes that
people want to see more relevant news and what their friends have to say
about it." They want more relevant items in the feed to show up, and
fresher comments as well.
AllThingsD equated this to the likes of Google's Panda algorithm.
Peter
from AllThingsD interviewed the News Feed manager Lars Backstrom at
Facebook. He asked him about Panda, in which Lars responded:
I’m
not totally familiar with the details of Panda. At least from the way
you described it, it’s maybe not quite at that scale. But it’s kind of a
step in that direction.
Whenever we make a change like this,
it has the potential to break some of the strategies employed by people
who get distribution on Facebook. My favorite example of this is when
you have a photo, and then a very explicit call to action where you say
“one like = one respect.”
So, when the text or photo has a call to
action, those posts naturally do much better. And in a traditional feed
ranking, where we’re evaluating just on the number of likes, those
things all did very well.
The funny thing is Matt Cutts tweeted it:

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