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New Facebook Messaging System Announced

Mark Zuckerberg just held a presentation to unveil Facebook's "next generation messaging" system. He repeatedly drove home the idea that "this is not email," nor is it "an email killer." Their plan is to tie together multiple forms of communication — email, texts, social updates, etc. — and blend them into conversations. As users go about their days, interacting with a variety of devices, the communication method automatically updates to whatever is appropriate at the time. If a user receives an email while he's at a desktop, browsing Facebook, it will bring up the message in a Facebook chat window. If the user is browsing on a smartphone, it will bring up the message there, instead. If it's a dumbphone, then a text message can be sent. Another central feature is the idea that conversation histories from multiple sources and different forms of communication can be integrated through Facebook, so that you no longer have to separately root through IM logs, SMS logs, old emails, etc., to see old correspondence. (Users will have the ability to delete these, should they desire.) The last major feature they mentioned is what they call the "social" inbox, which is based on whitelisting. Users will be able to set up primary inboxes which only display communications they definitely want to see, while leaving low-priority messages, spam, and all the other noise typical to email in an inbox they check less frequently. The new system will be rolled out slowly over the next few months.

5 of 240 comments (clear)

  1. All Your Messages Belong To Us by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Facebook wants all your messages so they can mine them for any possible personal information and sell it to the highest bidders. Is anyone surprised?

  2. Google Wave, Anyone? by NickFortune · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That sounds very similar to the idea behind Wave.

    Which is interesting, since it's not so long ago that the Wave creator quit Google for Facebook.

    Let's see if the idea fares any better on facebook than it did on Google.

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    Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  3. Google Wave(tm) - now with less privacy! by lwsimon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have misgivings about giving Google access to this much data, and at least they promise to act responsibly.

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    Learn about Photography Basics.
  4. the ebb and flow of this by digitalsushi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In the beginning, the geeks floated in the muck with the commoners. And they were annoyed and so they built a boat on which to hide from that underneath.

    And then the commoners heard of the boat and they too, came aboard.

    And so then, the geeks, annoyed, hopped back into the mucky waters below, only to find it empty and serene.

    And so is my view of the Internet, as I watch the shadows of the SS Facebook floating above me. I can hear it's muted basslines if I stop long enough to listen.

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    slashdot: where everyone yells sarcastic metaphors to themselves to understand the issue
  5. Re:Gmail/Gchat? by Threni · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Also, unless you change the default settings, opt out, and keep up wit the changes, other people will be allowed to read your email, and send email on you behalf.