NEW YORK (AP) — Facebook has long declared that it's "free and
always will be." And it still is — unless you want more friends to see
what you have to say.The social media giant is rolling out a
feature in the U.S. that lets users pay to promote their posts to
friends, just as advertisers do. Facebook has been testing the service
in New Zealand, where it tries out a lot of new features, and has
gradually introduced it in more than 20 other countries. Facebook said
Wednesday that promoting a post — such as announcing a garage sale,
charity drive or big news like an engagement — will bump it higher in
your friends' news feeds.
"Every day, news feed delivers your
posts to your friends. Sometimes a particular friend might not notice
your post, especially if a lot of their friends have been posting
recently and your story isn't near the top of their feed," wrote
Abhishek Doshi, a software engineer at Facebook, on Facebook's news
site.
Facebook didn't say how much it will cost to promote the
posts, only that it's considering a range of prices as part of the
test. On Wednesday, though, some users could see $7 as a cost per each
update that they want to promote.

