- by foxnews
- 08 Apr 2025
It's time to reset your feed and take control of what you see.
Win an iPhone 16 Pro with Apple Intelligence ($999 value).
Start with Facebook
Goodbye, annoying ads. It only takes a minute to kick out the things you no longer want to see.
The fix: Filter your advertising topics by going to Settings & Privacy > Settings > Account Center > Ad Preferences > Customize ads.
Now, on to YouTube
The fix: On the YouTube app, tap You to bring up your History. Tap the cog icon > Settings > Manage All History. At the bottom, you'll see DELETE with a blue down arrow. Tap from the dropdown menu to delete videos from today, a custom range or all time. Click X to remove items individually, if you prefer.
TikTok tracks your habits
TikTok's algorithm is built to keep you on the app. Every time you like, follow or comment on something, it tells the algorithm you're interested in a video, and more videos like it will pop up on your For You page. Disliking a video or writing a nasty comment doesn't matter, by the way; you still kept watching.
The fix: Reset your feed. Open your Profile in the bottom right corner then press the three lines at the top right > Settings and Privacy > Content Preferences > Refresh Your For You Feed > Continue.
Fine-tune Instagram
The fix: Tap the three dots in the upper right corner. From here, you can adjust:
Most apps have this option
On just about every social platform, you can hide or see less of certain things. The more you take this action, the more you steer the algorithm.
The fix: Next to a post, video or anything else, look for the three-dot or three-line menu that opens more options. On YouTube, for example, tap the three dots next to a video and choose Don't recommend channel or Not interested.
Final piece of advice
Your social media feed is carefully curated based on who you follow, who follows you and, most importantly, what you do online. Sure, you can reset your algorithm, but don't be fooled. Every post you linger on, like, comment on or share gets tracked and used to shape what you see next. Even just scrolling tells the platform what grabs your attention.
Before your next deep dive, remember: Big Tech is always watching, and your every move fine-tunes what pops up next.
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