This means that once a user turned on sound for a video in their feed, all other videos will start to play automatically. Heaven or a nightmare? It’s a point of perspective.
For advertisers at least, that’s a welcome news as they want their ad seen as well as heard, but the same cannot be said for the average user who just wants to look at some pictures or watch videos. Some may love the new feature as it means that they do not have to individually turn on sounds for every video, yet another segment of users may find the feature irksome when scrolling through their feed and hearing unwanted audio, especially when they are ad-related.
Read about
How to tell if a guy or girl likes you on social media
Facebook’s 21-year-old wunderkind leaves for Google
Google adds autoplaying videos to search results on Android
Here’s how it will work
When a person enters the app, all videos will start with the sound off, whether they’re ads or unpaid posts. During that session, if a person taps the volume for any of the videos, the rest will automatically play with volume for the remainder of the session. Reverting to mute on an individual video will make mute the default for subsequent clips for the rest of the session. The next session the setting returns to volume off.





