Alexandria: A Library of Pluralistic Values for Realtime Re-Ranking of Social Media Feeds

Akaash Kolluri* Stanford University

Renn Su* Stanford University

Farnaz Jahanbakhsh University ofMichigan

Dora Zhao Stanford University

Tiziano Piccardi Stanford University

Michael S. Bernstein Stanford University

AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 2026


Alexandria is a browser extension that lets users re-rank their X/Twitter feeds using a library of 78 values from diverse frameworks, enabling more nuanced and user-controlled feed curation beyond engagement metrics.

Abstract

Social media feed ranking algorithms fail when they too narrowly focus on engagement as their objective. The literature has asserted a wide variety of values that these algorithms should account for as well—ranging from well-being to productive discourse—far more than can be encapsulated by a single topic or theory. In response, we present a library of values for social media algorithms: a pluralistic set of 78 values as articulated across the literature, implemented into LLM-powered content classifiers that can be installed individually or in combination for real-time re-ranking of social media feeds. We investigate this approach by developing a browser extension, Alexandria, that re-ranks the X/Twitter feed in real time based on the user’s desired values. Through two user studies, both qualitative (N=12) and quantitative (N=257), we found that diverse user needs require a large library of values, enabling more nuanced preferences and greater user control. With this work, we argue that the values criticized as missing from social media ranking algorithms can be operationalized and deployed today through end-user tools.