Ads will eventually be houseguests in Facebook Home

Facebook Home
Ads will blend, we're sure, but will still be annoying

When Facebook introduced Facebook Home, its new overlay for Android today, Mark Zuckerberg and his presenting partners talked up its "putting people, not apps first" properties, like those "delightful" Chat Heads you can waggle around your home screen and apps.

One thing they didn't talk about (until asked) was the always hovering topic of ads. The image-centric layout of Cover Feed seems primed to deliver marketing content in an attractive and more "natural" way. Surely Facebook isn't passing up the chance to make some mobile ad moolah?

Of course not, though it won't grab that golden ring right away.

"For v.1, [it] doesn't support a lot of types of stories that you can share on Facebook yet, including ads," Zuckerberg said.

"There are no ads in this yet," he continued. "I'm sure at some point there will be."

More to come

To reiterate, that's a "yep" on ads from Zuckerberg. That's the curt answer he gave when asked to confirm that ads won't come to the Cover Feed at launch, but may at some point.

There are a number of content types Facebook Home won't have when it launches on select devices April 12. Besides ads, video cards, group joins and friending stories won't be displayed at launch.

Over time, Zuckerberg said, more social media feeds could find their way into Cover Feed, which provides a constant stream of content and images within the home and lock screens.

Users could one day see their Instagram, Pinterest, Tumblr and "any other social service" feeds stumble onto Cover Feed, avoiding a specific mention of Twitter.

Since Facebook plans to update Home on a monthly basis, we'll surely see more content feeds, including ads, come as time goes by.

Facebook is going beyond a mobile first mentality to one of "mobile best." The company said today it wants to make mobile the best way to experience the social network, which can only mean serving customers more richly in that space. It also means that advertisements must follow as Facebook, like all businesses, must make money.

So for now, those who pick up an HTC First or download Home onto their Galaxy S3, Galaxy S4, HTC One, One X+ and the Galaxy Note 2 can enjoy an ad-free experience. Appreciate it while it lasts.

Michelle Fitzsimmons

Michelle was previously a news editor at TechRadar, leading consumer tech news and reviews. Michelle is now a Content Strategist at Facebook.  A versatile, highly effective content writer and skilled editor with a keen eye for detail, Michelle is a collaborative problem solver and covered everything from smartwatches and microprocessors to VR and self-driving cars.

Latest in Facebook
The Meta logo on a smartphone in front of the Facebook logo a little bit blurred in the background
Meta's new 'Link History' feature for the Facebook app isn't as protective of your data as it claims
The Meta Quest 3 in action
How much more data can Meta collect? Probably a lot, thanks to the Meta Quest 3 and Ray-Ban smart glasses
A laptop screen showing a Facebook Groups page
Scam alert: how to spot hoax posts in your Facebook Groups
Facebook
Facebook Messenger is losing a useful messaging feature soon
mother watching her daughter's activity online
Meta's new Facebook parental controls show social media still doesn't like responsibility
Phone screen closeup showing the download page for the Facebook app in the app store.
Meta wants to create a Facebook app store to compete with Apple's App Store and Google Play
Latest in News
Apple's Craig Federighi demonstrates the iPhone Mirroring feature of macOS Sequoia at the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2024.
Report: iOS 19 and macOS 16 could mark their biggest design overhaul in years – and we have one request
Lego Mario Kart – Mario & Standard Kart set on a shelf.
Lego just celebrated Mario Day in the best way possible, with an incredible Mario Kart set that's up for preorder now
TCL QM7K TV on orange background
TCL’s big, bright new mid-range mini-LED TVs have built-in Bang & Olufsen sound
Apple iPhone 16e
Which affordable phone wins the mid-range race: the iPhone 16e, Nothing 3a, or Samsung Galaxy A56? Our latest podcast tells all
Homepage of Manus, a new Chinese artificial intelligence agent capable of handling complex, real-world tasks, is seen on the screen of an iPhone.
Manus AI may be the new DeepSeek, but initial users report problems
Google Maps
Nightmare Google Maps glitch is deleting timelines, and there isn't a fix yet