Hubbry Logo
List of Facebook featuresList of Facebook featuresMain
Open search
List of Facebook features
Community hub
List of Facebook features
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
List of Facebook features
List of Facebook features
from Wikipedia

Facebook is a social-network service website launched on February 4, 2004, by Mark Zuckerberg. The following is a list of software and technology features that can be found on the Facebook website and mobile app and are available to users of the social media site.

Facebook structure

[edit]

News Feed

[edit]

The news feed is the primary system through which users are exposed to content posted on the network. Using a secret method (initially known as EdgeRank), Facebook selects a handful of updates to actually show users every time they visit their feed, out of an average of 1500 updates they can potentially receive.[1][2]

On September 6, 2006, Ruchi Sanghvi announced a new home page feature called News Feed. Originally, when users logged into Facebook, they were presented with a customizable version of their own profile. The new layout, by contrast, created an alternative home page in which users saw a constantly updated list of their friends' Facebook activity. News Feed highlights information that includes profile changes, upcoming events, and birthdays, among other updates. This has enabled spammers and other users to manipulate these features by creating illegitimate events or posting fake birthdays to attract attention to their profile or cause. News Feed also shows conversations taking place between the walls of a user's friends. An integral part of the News Feed interface is the Mini Feed, a news stream on the user's profile page that shows updates about that user. Unlike in the News Feed, the user can delete events from the Mini Feed after they appear so that they are no longer visible to profile visitors. In 2011, Facebook updated the News Feed to show top stories and most recent stories in one feed, and the option to highlight stories to make them top stories, as well as to un-highlight stories. In response to users' criticism, Facebook later updated the News Feed to allow users to view recent stories first.

Initially, the addition of the News Feed caused some discontent among Facebook users. Many users complained that the News Feed was too cluttered with excess information. Others were concerned that the News Feed made it too easy for other people to track activities like changes in relationship status, events, and conversations with other users.[3] This tracking is often casually referred to as "Facebook-Stalking". In response to this dissatisfaction, creator Mark Zuckerberg issued an apology for the site's failure to include appropriate customizable privacy features. Thereafter, users were able to control what types of information were shared automatically with friends. Currently, users may prevent friends from seeing updates about several types of especially private activities, although other events are not customizable in this way.

With the introduction of the "New Facebook" in early February 2010 came a complete redesign of the pages, several new features and changes to News Feeds. On their personal Feeds (now integrated with Walls), users were given the option of removing updates from any application as well as choosing the size they show up on the page. Furthermore, the community feed (containing recent actions by the user's friends) contained options to instantly select whether to hear more or less about certain friends or applications.

On March 7, 2013, Facebook announced a redesigned newsfeed. In 2022, Facebook's parent company, Meta Platforms, announced it is renaming the "News Feed" to simply be named "Feed".[4][5]

Friends

[edit]

"Friending" someone on the platform is the act of sending another user a "friend request" on Facebook. The two people are Facebook friends once the receiving party accepts the friend request. In addition to accepting the request, the user has the option of declining the friend request or hiding it using the "Not Now" feature. Deleting a friend request removes the request, but does allow the sender to resend it in the future. The "Not Now" feature hides the request but does not delete it, allowing the receiver to revisit the request at a later date.

It is also possible to remove a user from one's friends, which is referred to as "unfriending" by Facebook.[6] Many Facebook users also refer to the process as "de-friending".[7] "Unfriend" was New Oxford American Dictionary's word of the year in 2009.[8][9] Facebook does not notify a user if they have been unfriended, but there are scripts that provide this functionality.[10] There has also been a study on why Facebook users unfriend, which found that differences, especially between ages, and few mutual friendships were the dominant factors correlated with unfriending, all of which mirrors the decline of physical-world relationships.[11]

Facebook profiles also have advanced privacy features to restrict content to certain users, such as non-friends or persons on a specific list.

Wall

[edit]

The wall is the original profile space where Facebook users' content was displayed, until December 2011. It allowed the posting of messages, often short or temporal notes, for the user to see while displaying the time and date the message was written. A user's wall is visible to anyone with the ability to see their full profile, and friends' wall posts appear in the user's News Feed.

In July 2007, Facebook allowed users to post attachments to the wall, whereas previously the wall was limited to text only.[12] In May 2008, the Wall-to-Wall for each profile was limited to only 40 posts. Facebook later allowed users to insert HTML code in boxes attached to the wall via apps like Static FBML which has allowed marketers to track use of their fan pages with Google Analytics.

The concept of tagging in status updates, an attempt to imitate Twitter,[13] began September 14, 2009. This meant putting the name of a user, a brand, an event or a group[14] in a post in such a way that it linked to the wall of the Facebook page being tagged, and made the post appear in news feeds for that page, as well as those of selected friends.[15] This was first done using the "@" symbol followed by the person's name. Later, a numerical ID for the person could be used. Visually, this was displayed with bold text.[16] Early in 2011, tagging in comments was added.

In addition to postings by other users, the wall also displayed other events that happened to the user's profile. This included when information was changed, when they changed their profile picture, and when they connected with new people, among other things.[citation needed]

The wall has been replaced by the Timeline profile layout, which was introduced in December 2011.[citation needed]

Timeline

[edit]

In September 2011, Facebook introduced "Timeline" at its developer conference, intended to revamp users' profiles in order to show content based on year, month and date. "Cover" photos were introduced, taking up a significant portion of the top of pages, and a redesigned display of personal information such as friends, likes and photos appeared on the left-hand side, while story posts appeared on the right. The new design introduced flexible sizing for story posts in the feed, along with more prominent location and photo placement. The Timeline also encouraged scrolling, with constantly loading story posts of users' pasts.[17][18][19] Timeline began gradually rolling out to users in New Zealand starting December 7, 2011,[20] and was made officially available to all users worldwide on December 15.[21][22] By January, the switch to Timeline became required for all users.[23][24] In February 2012, Timeline became available for Facebook Pages.[25]

Likes and Reactions

[edit]
The "like" button on Facebook

The like button, first enabled on February 9, 2009,[26] enables users to easily interact with status updates, comments, photos, links shared by friends, videos and advertisements. Once clicked by a user, the designated content appears in the News Feeds of that user's friends,[27][28] and the button also displays the number of other users who have liked the content, including a full or partial list of those users.[29] The like button was extended to comments in June 2010.[30] After extensive testing[31] and years of questions from the public about whether it had an intention to incorporate a "Dislike" button,[32] Facebook officially rolled out "Reactions" to users worldwide on February 24, 2016, letting users long-press on the like button for an option to use one of six pre-defined emotions, including "Like", "Love", "Haha", "Wow", "Sad", or "Angry" and for a limited time the following reactions, "Care", "Pride Flag", "Thankful".[31][33] Reactions were also extended to comments in May 2017.[34][35]

In June 2017, in celebration of Pride month, Facebook introduced a rainbow flag as part of its Reactions options.[36][37][38] The design of the reactions was updated in April 2019, with more frames comprising the icons' animations as well as a general graphical overhaul.[citation needed] Around September 2019 Facebook conducted a trial in Australia to hide the like count on posts.[39] In 2020 during the COVID-19 outbreak, a "Care" reaction was added to Facebook.[40]

Comments

[edit]

To mark the 30th anniversary of the GIF, Facebook has introduced a new feature enabling users to add GIFs to comments. The eagerly awaited feature can be accessed using the GIF button located beside the emoji picker. Users can choose from the available GIFs sourced from Facebook's GIF partners, but cannot upload other GIFs.

GIFs aside, the comments feature also allow users to attach stickers. Facebook has a standard sticker set, whereby sticker options are categorised according to popular moods and activities such as "Happy", "Eating", and "Confused". In 2020, Facebook introduced "Make Your Avatar"[41] which enables users to customize a virtual look-alike of yourself to use as stickers in comments as well as Messenger chats. Essentially Facebook's version of Snap's Bitmoji, Avatars have been since made available in Australia, New Zealand, Europe and Canada.

In December 2015, an indicator was added to the comment area to show when a friend is typing a new comment.[42]

Messages and inbox

[edit]

Facebook Messenger is an instant messaging service and software application. Originally developed as Facebook Chat in 2008,[43] the company revamped its messaging service in 2010,[44] and subsequently released standalone iOS and Android apps in August 2011.[45] Over the years, Facebook has released new apps on a variety of different operating systems,[46][47][48] launched a dedicated website interface,[49] and separated the messaging functionality from the main Facebook app, requiring users to download the standalone apps.[50]

Facebook Messenger lets Facebook users send messages to each other. Complementing regular conversations, Messenger lets users make voice calls[51] and video calls[52] both in one-to-one interactions[53] and in group conversations.[54] Its Android app has integrated support for SMS[55] and "Chat Heads", which are round profile photo icons appearing on-screen regardless of what app is open,[56] while both apps support multiple accounts,[57] conversations with optional end-to-end encryption,[58] and playing "Instant Games", which are select games built into Messenger.[59] Some features, including sending money[60] and requesting transportation,[61] are limited to the United States.[60] In 2017, Facebook has added "Messenger Day", a feature that lets users share photos and videos in a story-format with all their friends with the content disappearing after 24 hours;[62] Reactions, which lets users tap and hold a message to add a reaction through an emoji;[63] and Mentions, which lets users in group conversations type @ to give a particular user a notification.[63]

In March 2015, Facebook announced that it would start letting businesses and users interact through Messenger with features such as tracking purchases and receiving notifications, and interacting with customer service representatives. It also announced that third-party developers could integrate their apps into Messenger, letting users enter an app while inside Messenger and optionally share details from the app into a chat.[64] In April 2016, it introduced an API for developers to build chatbots into Messenger, for uses such as news publishers building bots to give users news through the service,[65] and in April 2017, it enabled the M virtual assistant for users in the U.S., which scans chats for keywords and suggests relevant actions, such as its payments system for users mentioning money.[66][67] Additionally, Facebook expanded the use of bots, incorporating group chatbots into Messenger as "Chat Extensions", adding a "Discovery" tab for finding bots, and enabling special, branded QR codes that, when scanned, take the user to a specific bot.[68]

In August 2018, Facebook discontinued users' ability to post to their Timeline using SMS.

In September 2022, Facebook added the "Community Chats" function, allowing people in a Facebook group to chat between each other on Messenger and on the Messenger app.[69]

Notifications

[edit]

Notifications tell the user that something has been added to their profile page. Examples include: a message being shared on the user's wall or a comment on a picture of the user or on a picture that the user has previously commented on. Initially, notifications for events were limited to one per event; these were eventually grouped category-wise. For instance, 10 users having liked a user's picture now count for one notification, whereas in the earlier stages, these would have accounted for ten separate notifications. The number of notifications can be changed in the settings section, to a maximum of 99. There is a red notification counter at the top of the page, which if clicked displays the most recent ones.

Groups

[edit]

Facebook Groups can be created by individual users. Groups allow members to post content such as links, media, questions, events, editable documents, and comments on these items.

Groups are used for collaboration and allow discussions, events, and numerous other activities. They are a way of enabling a number of people to come together online to share information and discuss specific subjects. They are increasingly used by clubs, companies and public sector organizations to engage with stakeholders, be they members of the public, employees, members, service users, shareholders or customers. Groups can have two different levels of privacy settings:

  • "Open" means both the group, its members and their comments are visible to the public (which includes non-members) but they cannot interact without joining.
  • "Secret" means that nothing can be viewed by the public unless a member specifically invites another user to join the group.[70]

Previously, in October 2010, there were version 0 (legacy) and version 1 (current) groups.[71] Version 1 or "new" groups can contain the name of the group in their URL if the email address of the group is set. Groups do not have a RSS feed to export the wall or the member list, such as Pages or Events have, but third parties provide such service if the group is set to an "open" privacy setting. All groups have since been migrated to a single design.[72]

Applications

[edit]

Events

[edit]

Facebook events are a way for members to let friends know about upcoming events in their community and to organize social gatherings. Events require an event name, network, host name, event type, start time, location, and a guest list of friends invited. Events can be public or private. Private events cannot be found in searches and are by invitation only. People who have not been invited cannot view a private event's description, Wall, or photos. They also will not see any Feed stories about the event. When setting up an event the user can choose to allow friends to upload photos or videos. Note that unlike real world events, all events are treated as separate entities (when the reality is some events sit inside other events, going to one event would preclude going to another, and so on).

In February 2011, Facebook began to use the hCalendar microformat to mark up events, and the hCard microformat for the events' venues, enabling the extraction of details to users' own calendar or mapping applications. Third parties facilitate events to be exported from Facebook pages to the iCalendar-format.[citation needed]

Marketplace

[edit]

In 2007, Facebook introduced the Facebook Marketplace, allowing users to post classified ads within sale, housing, and jobs categories.[73] However, the feature never gained traction, and in 2009, control was transferred to Oodle, the platform powering the functionality. The feature was then eventually shut down in 2014.[73] In October 2016, Facebook announced a new Marketplace, citing the growth of organized "buy and sell" Facebook Groups, and gave the new version a higher prominence in the main Facebook app, taking the navigation position previously held by Facebook Messenger.[73][74]

According to Facebook's internal data from 2019, the Marketplace used to only be a C2C platform but now there is a major B2C opportunity for US retailers.[75]

In June 2021, the European Commission and Competition and Markets Authority launched antitrust probes over concerns that Facebook's Marketplace took advantage of data from competing services that advertise on the platform and used it to gain "an undue competitive advantage".[76]

Notes

[edit]

Facebook Notes was introduced on August 22, 2006, as a blogging platform offering users the ability to write notes, attach photos, and optionally import blog entries from external sources.[77]

The most known usage form of the Notes feature was the Internet meme "25 Random Things About Me", which involves writing 25 things about the user that their friends do not already know about them and using the tag function to ask 25 friends to do the same. The trend became popular in February 2009, with The New York Times discussing its sudden surge, noting that nearly five million notes were created for the purpose, a doubling of the feature's use in the previous week and larger than any other week in Facebook's history.[78]

In September 2015, the Notes feature received an update, bringing additional features, such as adding a cover photo and caption, the ability to resize photos, and text formatting options.[79]

The Notes feature became read-only on October 31, 2020 and then entirely disappeared without notice a few weeks later.[citation needed]

Places

[edit]

Facebook announced Places on August 18, 2010. It is a feature that lets users check into Facebook using a mobile device to let a user's friends know where they are at the moment.[80]

In November 2010, Facebook announced "Deals", a subset of the Places offering, which allows for users to check in from restaurants, supermarkets, bars, and coffee shops using an app on a mobile device and then be rewarded discounts, coupons, and free merchandise. This feature is marketed as a digital version of a loyalty card or coupon where a customer gets rewarded for loyal buying behavior.[81]

On October 10, 2010, Places became available on BlackBerry,[82] iPhone, and Android. Other users, including Windows Mobile users, must use an HTML5 browser to use Places via Facebook Touch Site.[83]

Facebook Places was reported discontinued on August 24, 2011,[84] but was relaunched in November 2014, now including cover images, discovery sections, city/category landing pages, a deeper integration with the Location API, Graph Search queries and user generated content.[85]

Platform

[edit]

The Facebook Platform provides a set of APIs and tools which enable third-party developers to integrate with the "open graph", whether through applications on Facebook.com or external websites and devices. Launched on May 24, 2007, Facebook Platform has evolved from enabling development just on Facebook.com to one also supporting integration across the web and devices.

Facebook Platform Statistics as of May 2010:

  • More than one million developers and entrepreneurs from more than 180 countries
  • More than 550,000 active applications currently on Facebook Platform
  • Every month, more than 70% of Facebook users engage with Platform applications
  • More than 250,000 websites have integrated with Facebook Platform
  • More than 100 million Facebook users engage with Facebook on external websites every month

On August 29, 2007, Facebook changed the way in which the popularity of applications is measured, to give attention to the more engaging applications, following criticism that ranking applications only by the number of people who had installed the application was giving an advantage to the highly viral, yet useless applications. Tech blog Valleywag has criticized Facebook Applications, labeling them a "cornucopia of uselessness". Others have called for limiting third-party applications so the Facebook "user experience" is not degraded.

Primarily attempting to create viral applications is a method that has certainly been employed by numerous Facebook application developers. Stanford University even offered a class in the Fall of 2007, entitled, Computer Science (CS) 377W: "Create Engaging Web Applications Using Metrics and Learning on Facebook". Numerous applications created by the class were highly successful, and ranked amongst the top Facebook applications, with some achieving over 3.5 million users in a month.

Facebook Questions

[edit]

In May 2010, Facebook began testing Questions, which is expected to compete with services such as Yahoo Answers.[86]

On March 24, 2011, Facebook announced that its new product, Facebook Questions, facilitates short, poll [87]-like answers in addition to long-form responses, and also links directly to relevant items in Facebook's directory of "fan pages".[88]

Photos

[edit]

Facebook allows users to upload photos, and to add them to albums. In December 2010, the company enabled facial recognition technology, helping users identify people to tag in uploaded photos.[89] In May 2011, Facebook launched a feature to tag specific Facebook pages in photos, including brands, products, and companies.[90] On mobile, Facebook introduced photo filters in August 2011.[91]

In May 2016, Facebook started allowing users to upload and view 360-degree photos. Mobile users will move their device around to navigate the environment, while website users will have to click and drag.[92][93]

According to Facebook in 2010, there were over 50 billion photos stored on the service.[94]

Videos

[edit]

In May 2007, Facebook officially launched its video platform, allowing users to upload recorded videos or livestream videos from their webcams. The service supports the ability to "tag" friends in similar ways to photos.[95] In December 2014, Facebook began rolling out functionality for business Pages to pin ("Feature") a video to the top of their Videos tab.[96]

In January 2015, Facebook published a report detailing a significant growth in video viewing on the platform, specifically highlighting the fact that Facebook has seen an average of one billion video views every day since June 2014.[97]

In September 2015, Facebook announced that it would begin showing view counts for publicly posted videos.[98] A few weeks later, the company announced that users will be able to view 360-degree videos. On the website, users can click around to change the perspective, whereas mobile users can physically move their device to interact with the virtual space. The result is the work of a collaboration between Facebook and its Oculus division.[99][100][101]

Live streaming

[edit]

In August 2015, Facebook began to allow users to live stream video. Streams appear on the News Feed, and users can comment on them in real-time. Live broadcasts are automatically saved as a video post to the streamer's page. The feature was positioned as a competitor to services such as Meerkat and Periscope.[102][103]

The feature was initially available only to verified public figures through the Facebook Mentions app (which is also exclusive to these users).[102][104] Live streaming began to roll out for public use in January 2016, beginning with the Facebook iOS app in the United States.[105][106]

In April 2016, Facebook unveiled a live-streaming API, aimed to allow developers to use any device, including professional video cameras and drones, to integrate with the live-video streaming platform.[107][108] Facebook also updated its mobile app to provide a dedicated section for showcasing current and recent live broadcasts.[109] To drive its adoption, Facebook provided incentives to publishers and celebrities to perform live broadcasts, including monetary rewards.[110][111]

In March 2017, Facebook extended live-streaming support to PCs.[112][113] In May, Facebook Live was updated on iOS to let two users livestream together,[114] and the following month, Facebook added support for closed captioning to live video. This is limited to the CEA-608 standard, a notable difference from the automatic closed captioning available for Page videos that are recorded and then uploaded, due to difficulties in adapting the same standard at scale on the low-latency real-time nature for live content.[115][116]

At the end of 2017, Facebook Live was updated to offer support for livestreaming Facebook Messenger games.[117][118]

Controversial use

[edit]

Facebook Live was used by the perpetrators of an incident in which four black young adults kidnapped and tortured a mentally disabled white male.[119] All four were charged and convicted of hate crimes.[120] Facebook Live was also used by Brenton Tarrant, perpetrator of the Christchurch mosque shootings to broadcast the attack on Al Noor Mosque. A total of 51 people were killed and another 40 were injured at Al Noor and in a subsequent attack at Linwood Islamic Centre. This video was viewed over 4,000 times and had 200 watching it live.[121][122][123] Because of this, Facebook announced it would be considering restrictions on the service.[124] The service was also used to broadcast the hostage taking during the Nakhon Ratchasima shootings, which ultimately left 31 people dead including the perpetrator and 57 others injured.[125][126][127] A shooting spree in Memphis in September 2022 was livestreamed by the suspect, a 19-year-old male; witnesses who viewed the stream saw him entering a store and shooting at customers inside.[128] Additionally, Ronnie McNutt, an army veteran, committed suicide on a Facebook Live stream, leading to the footage spreading outside of Facebook Live to other social media platforms, including TikTok and Instagram, also owned by Meta.

Facebook Paper

[edit]

During the same week as its tenth anniversary (in 2014), Facebook launched the Paper iPhone app. The app consists of two major features: Firstly, Facebook's News Feed is more graphic, as the app uses technology such as full-screen photos and video footage. Content is organized under headings such as "Creators" and "Planet"; secondly, Paper allows users to post statuses, photos, and "stories" to Facebook that has been described as a different, more presentation-focused design.[129]

Facebook Mentions

[edit]

Facebook Mentions, initially an iOS-only app, was released by the company in 2014. It allows public figures with a verified account to engage with their respective fanbases in a more concentrated experience.[130][131] The app had been in testing with select celebrities for nearly a year before its launch.[132] In September 2015, Facebook expanded the availability of the Mentions app to journalists and other verified pages, and also gave users of the app the ability to post exclusively to their Facebook followers rather than both followers and friends. The update also enabled the first livestreaming functionality through Facebook Live.[133] Facebook Mentions became available on Android in January 2016.[134][135] In December 2016, Facebook Live on Mentions received several updates, including comment moderation tools, broadcasting appearance customization, and editing features to remove unnecessary footage at the beginning or end of a broadcast.[136][137][138]

Facebook Moments

[edit]

Facebook Moments was a private photo sharing app launched by Facebook in 2015 but discontinued on February 25, 2019.[139] The app was powered by Facebook's facial recognition technology to group photos and let users easily share them.[140]

Facebook Gaming

[edit]

Facebook Podcasts

[edit]

Facebook Podcast was unveiled in April and launched on June 22, 2021.[141] The integration allows listeners to find, subscribe to and listen to shows within the Facebook platform.

In addition to the podcast product, Facebook is also working on other audio-focused offerings like a virtual chatroom feature akin to Clubhouse and short-form audio posts dubbed "Soundbites".

General features

[edit]

Facebook dynamic text/type

[edit]

In November 2015, Facebook made changes to their text-only status update on Timeline to allow for adjustable text sizes (dynamic text) on mobile apps.[142]

Credits

[edit]

Facebook Credits are a virtual currency users can use to buy gifts, and virtual goods in many games and applications on the Facebook platform. As of July 2010, users of Facebook can purchase Facebook credits in Australian Dollars, British Pounds, Canadian Dollars, Chilean peso, Colombian peso, Danish krone, Euro, Hong Kong dollar, Japanese yen, Norwegian krone, Swedish krona, Swiss franc, Turkish lira, US Dollars, and Venezuelan Bolivar. Facebook credits can be used on many popular games such as Happy Aquarium, Happy Island, Zoo Paradise, Happy Pets, Hello City, It Girl, FarmVille, and Mafia Wars.[143]

Facebook Credits went into its alpha stage in May 2009 and progressed into the beta stage in February 2010,[144][145] which ended in January 2011.[146] At that time, Facebook announced all Facebook game developers would be required to process payments only through Facebook Credits from July 1, 2011.[147][148][149] In March 2011, Facebook created an official subsidiary to handle payments: Facebook Payments Inc.[150] In June 2012, Facebook announced it would no longer use its own money system, Facebook Credits. Users with credits will see them converted into their own currencies.[151] Facebook Credits was officially removed from Facebook in September 2013.[152]

Feature phones

[edit]

Although like all other website apps Facebook made its presence on the smartphones as mentioned but also is present for the feature phones. As the company said that the feature phones dominate the American cell phone markets, hence an app was exclusively made for this purpose as well.[153]

[edit]

Released in July 2013, Graph Search allows users to search within their network of friends for answers to natural language questions such as, "Movies my friends who like The Hobbit liked" and receive direct answers, rather than the list of websites that search engines usually provide.[154][155]

IPv6

[edit]

According to a June 2010 report by Network World, Facebook said that it was offering "experimental, non-production" support for IPv6, the long-anticipated upgrade to the Internet's main communications protocol. The news about Facebook's IPv6 support was expected; Facebook told Network World in February 2010, that it planned to support native IPv6 user requests "by the midpoint of this year".[156]

In a presentation at the Google IPv6 Implementors Conference, Facebook's network engineers said it was "easy to make [the] site available on v6". Facebook said it deployed dual-stack IPv4 and IPv6 support on its routers, and that it made no changes to its hosts in order to support IPv6. Facebook also said it was supporting an emerging encapsulation mechanism known as Locator/Identifier Separation Protocol (LISP), which separates Internet addresses from endpoint identifiers to improve the scalability of IPv6 deployments. "Facebook was the first major Web site on LISP (v4 and v6)", Facebook engineers said during their presentation.[citation needed] Facebook said that using LISP allowed them to deploy IPv6 services quickly with no extra cost. In addition, Facebook enabled IPv6 on its main domain names during World IPv6 Launch.[citation needed]

Listen with Friends

[edit]

Listen with Friends allows Facebook users to listen to music and discuss the tunes using Facebook Chat with friends at the same time. Users can also listen in as a group while one friend acts as a DJ. Up to 50 friends can listen to the same song at the same time, and chat about it. Every time a user begins listening to music with a friend, a "story will be posted to her/his friends" ticker and/or news feed. Users will have control over who will be able to see when they are listening with a friend through their App Settings page after installing the compatible music app.[157] This feature was initially supported through Audizer.com, but as of August 2012, services were discontinued and the Facebook / Audizer splash page has been redirected to Facebook.com.[158]

Mood faces

[edit]

Facebook chat supports numerous emoticons, like (^^^) for a shark. Recently, it has also become possible to post larger, animated images through Facebook's built in emotion system.

  • At one time, entering the Konami Code followed by Enter at the home page caused a lensflare-style series of circles to display when clicking, typing, or scrolling.[159]
  • Asking "how is babby formed?" with the Questions feature released September 23, 2010, will Rickroll the user.
  • A user can change his/her language to upside down English.
  • Entering @[x:y] resolves a user's name, where x is a positive integer and y is 0 or 1. For example, @[4:0] resolves to "Mark Zuckerberg".

Phone

[edit]

At an event in April 2013, Mark Zuckerberg announced a new Android-based "Home" feature, which would show content from users' Facebook pages on the home page of their mobile phones, without having to open an app.[160]

Poke and Greetings

[edit]

Since Facebook's inception, users have had the ability to "poke" other users.[161][162][163] The feature, its actual purpose never officially explained by the company, served as a quick way to attract the attention of another user.[164] In a 2007 opinion article in The Guardian, Facebook explained to a question about the "poke" that "When we created the poke, we thought it would be cool to have a feature without any specific purpose. People interpret the poke in many different ways, and we encourage you to come up with your own meanings."[165] The feature was never removed from Facebook; in December 2017, the company gave the button a significantly more prominent placement on users' profiles,[166] along with new forms of quick interactions, including "hug", "wink" and "high-five", collectively all referred to as "Greetings".[167]

Smartphone integration

[edit]

Many smartphones offer access to the Facebook services either through their respective web browsers or through mobile apps.

The iPhone-compatible website was launched in August 2007, followed by a dedicated iOS app in July 2008.[168] The early mobile website was severely limited in its feature set, only gaining the ability to post comments in late 2008, a year after launch.[169] By 2009, other companies had developed Facebook mobile apps for Nokia, HTC, LG, Motorola, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, and Windows Mobile devices, though a significant portion of Facebook's userbase was still using the original mobile website.[169] During the early success of app stores, Facebook gambled on the idea of a universal webpage rather than specific operating systems, choosing to maintain its primary focus on its mobile site. CEO Mark Zuckerberg told Fortune that such a decision was "probably one of the biggest mistakes we've ever made".[169] While the app was experiencing significant criticism for software bugs and crashes, Facebook began its "Facebook for Every Phone" initiative in January 2011, designing an app for a large number of feature phones. As Android and iOS rose in popularity, Facebook shifted its focus, creating dedicated apps for each platform. However, Facebook was still not entirely convinced, using a "hybrid" solution of native computing code as a sort of "picture frame" for its mobile website. Mashable described it as a "one-size-fits-all nightmare".[169] In October 2011, Facebook updated its iOS app with support for iPad, adding larger photos and enabling more functionality, including the ability to post status updates and photos.[169] Finally, in 2012, the company relaunched its Android and iOS apps, going mobile-first and putting all of its resources into making an optimized experience for smartphones, including significant speed improvements.[169] In the years since, the company has increasingly expanded the feature set of its apps, dedicating more resources and seeing its userbase shifting from the mobile web to its apps.[169]

Third-party companies also created Facebook apps for their platforms. Microsoft developed a Facebook app for their Windows Phone 7 platform in February 2012,[170] Nokia offered a Facebook app on its Ovi Store for Nokia S60 devices in June 2009,[171] while BlackBerry also offered a Facebook application for its software platform in September 2012.[172]

Fundraising

[edit]

In December 2013, Facebook enabled a "Donate" button for charities and non-profit organizations to raise money.[173] Approximately two years later, the company released a new fundraiser feature, exclusively allowing non-profits to set up campaign pages and collect payments.[174][175] This was expanded in June 2016, when anyone could set up fundraisers on behalf of non-profit organizations,[176] and again expanded in March 2017 to offer personal users in the United States the ability to raise money, as well as for Facebook Pages to add a "Donate" button to their Facebook Live video streams.[177][178] In May, fundraisers were expanded with support for communities and sports teams,[179] and subsequently, in September, expanded internationally for charities in Europe.[180]

Status updates

[edit]

"Status updates" (also called a "status") allows users to post messages for their friends to read. In turn, friends can respond with their own comments, as well as clicking the "Like" button. A user's most recent updates appear at the top of their Timeline/Wall and are also noted in the "Recently Updated" section of a user's friend list. Originally, the purpose of the feature was to allow users to inform their friends of their current "status", including feelings, whereabouts, or actions, where Facebook prompted the status update with "Username is"... and users filled in the rest. This feature first became available in September 2006, though on December 13, 2007, the requirement to start a status update with is was removed.[181]

The is updates were followed by the "What are you doing right now?" status update question; in March 2009, the question was changed to "What's on your mind?"[182] In 2009, Facebook added the feature to tag certain friends (or groups, etc.) within one's status update by adding an @ character before their name, turning the friend's name into a link to their profile and including the message on the friend's wall. Tagging has since been updated to recognize friends' names by typing them into a status while a list of friends whose names match the inputted letters appears. A large percentage of the updates that are posted are humorous and as a result, many apps, websites and books have sprung up to help users to update their own.

Subscribe

[edit]

In September 2011, Facebook launched a "Subscribe" button, allowing users to follow public updates from people without requiring a Facebook friendship connection.[183][184] The feature was expanded to Pages in July 2012,[185] and to stories in the News Feed in August 2012.[186]

Ticker

[edit]

In September 2011, Facebook launched the "Ticker", a continually-updated feed on the right side of the screen showing friends' activities, including "likes", status updates, and comments.[187] The feed was criticized by users for offering a quiet way to stalk users' every move, prompting the company to consider removing it in a March 2013 redesign, though never did.[188] In December 2017, the company officially ended the "Ticker" feature, though quietly and without an announcement or explanation.[189][190]

URL shortener

[edit]

Starting June 2009, Facebook lets users choose a username specifically for their profile, enabling them to share links bearing their own www.facebook.com/username URL address.[191] There are limitations, however, to what usernames can be used, including only alphanumerical characters (A-Z, 0–9), a length of over five characters, only one username that is unique to the profile, and must adhere to Facebook's Statement of Rights and Responsibilities agreement.[192] The following December, Facebook launched its own URL shortener based on the FB.me domain name.[193][194]

Verified accounts

[edit]

TechCrunch reported in February 2012 that Facebook would introduce a "Verified Account" concept, denoting official pages for public figures. Such pages gain more prominence in the "People To Subscribe To" suggestions lists. Persons with established stage names, such as Stefani Germanotta known as Lady Gaga, can also choose to use their specific stage name for their profile, with the real name in the profile's "About" page. However, at the time, the feature did not show any visual signs of distinction from other pages.[195][196] In May 2013, the concept was updated to include a blue checkmark badge to highlight the account's Verified status.[197][198] In October 2015, Facebook introduced a "gray badge" verification system for local businesses with physical addresses, with the gray color intended to differentiate from its typical blue checkmarks assigned to celebrities, public figures, sports teams and media organizations.[199]

Hashtagging support

[edit]

On June 12, 2013, Facebook introduced its support for clickable hashtags to help users search for topics being actively discussed on the social network.[200][201]

Impressum

[edit]

In March 2014, some page administrators in Italy started being prompted to add an impressum to their Facebook page, described as "a legally mandated statement of the ownership and authorship of a document".[202]

Tor hidden service

[edit]

In October 2014, Facebook announced that users could connect to the website through a Tor hidden service using the privacy-protecting Tor browser and encrypted using SSL.[203][204] Announcing the feature, Facebook engineer Alec Muffett said that "Facebook's onion address provides a way to access Facebook through Tor without losing the cryptographic protections provided by the Tor cloud. [...] It provides end-to-end communication, from your browser directly into a Facebook datacenter."[203][204]

"Say Thanks"

[edit]

In November 2014, Facebook introduced "Say Thanks", an experience that lets user create personalized video greeting cards for friends on Facebook.[205]

Call-to-Action button

[edit]

In December 2014, Facebook announced that Pages run by businesses can display a so-called "call-to-action button" next to the page's like button. "Call to action" is a customizable button that lets page administrators add external links for easy visitor access to the business' primary objective, with options ranging from "Book Now", "Contact Us", "Use App", "Play Game", "Shop Now", "Sign Up", and "Watch Video".[206] Initially only rolled out in the United States, the feature was expanded internationally in February 2015.[207]

Snooze

[edit]

In September 2017, Facebook began testing a "Snooze" button, letting users temporarily unfollow friends for 24 hours, 7 days or 30 days.[208][209] The following December, the feature was enabled for all users, though the period of temporary unfollowing is specifically for 30 days.[210][211]

"Did You Know?" social questionnaires

[edit]

In response to decreased use of status updates on Facebook, the company began enabling "Did You Know?" social questionnaires in December 2017. The feature, which asks users to answer questions that are then shared as a status update, includes such questions as "The superpower I want most is...", "The first thing I'd do after winning the lottery is...", and "A guilty pleasure that I'm willing to admit to is..."[212][213]

Sound Collection music archive

[edit]

In December 2017, Facebook announced "Sound Collection"; an archive of copyright- and payment-free soundtracks and audio effects its users can use in their videos.[214][215]

Off-Facebook Activity

[edit]

In an August 20 blogpost, Facebook's Chief Privacy Officer Erin Egan, and Director of Product Management David Baser, announced "Off-Facebook Activity", to be released in Ireland, South Korea, and Spain, before being rolled out globally.[216] Egan and Baser outline that with the feature, "you can:

  • See a summary of the information other apps and websites have sent Facebook through our online business tools, like Facebook Pixel or Facebook Login
  • Disconnect this information from your account if you want to; and
  • Choose to disconnect future off-Facebook activity from your account. You can do this for all of your off-Facebook activity, or just for specific apps and websites."

A second blogpost on Facebook's Engineering website says that, while users will be able to "Choose to disconnect future off-Facebook activity" from their accounts, there will be a 48-hour window in which data from other websites will remain linked to the account."[217] During the 48-hour window when incoming off-Facebook data is still linked to your account, "it may be used for measurement purposes and to make improvements to our ads systems".[218]

Memories

[edit]

The Memories feature, introduced in late 2010, allows browsing ones timeline by year.[219] A feature under the same name was introduced in June 2018, showing events from the same day of earlier years.[220]

Security

[edit]

On May 12, 2011, Facebook announced that it is launching several new security features designed to protect users from malware and from getting their accounts hijacked.[221]

Facebook will display warnings when users are about to be duped by clickjacking and cross-site scripting attacks in which they think they are following a link to an interesting news story or taking action to see a video and instead end up spamming their friends.[221]

Facebook also offers two-factor authentication called "login approvals", which, if turned on, will require users to enter a code whenever they log into the site from a new or unrecognized device. The code is sent via text message to the user's mobile phone.[221]

Facebook is partnering with the free Web of Trust safe surfing service to give Facebook users more information about the sites they are linking to from the social network. When a user clicks on a potentially malicious link, a warning box will appear that gives more information about why the site might be dangerous. The user can either ignore the warning or go back to the previous page.[221]

Removed features

[edit]

Email

[edit]

In February 2010, TechCrunch reported that Facebook was working to rewrite its messaging service to turn it into a "fully featured webmail product", dubbed "Project Titan".[222] The feature, unofficially dubbed a "Gmail killer" internally, was launched on November 15, 2010,[223] and allowed users to directly communicate with each other via Facebook using several different methods. Users could create their own "username@facebook.com" email address to communicate, use text messaging, or through the Facebook website or mobile app's instant messaging chat. All messages were contained within single threads in a unified inbox.[224] The email service was terminated in February 2014 because of low uptake.[225][226]

FBML

[edit]

Facebook Markup Language (FBML) was considered to be Facebook's own version of HTML. While many of the tags of HTML can be used in FBML, there were also important tags that could not be used, such as HTML, HEAD, and BODY. Also, JavaScript could not be used with FBML.

According to the Facebook Markup Language (FBML) Developer's page, FBML is now deprecated. No new features will be added to FBML and developers are recommended to develop new applications utilizing HTML, JavaScript and CSS. FBML support ended January 1, 2012, and FBML was no longer functioning as of June 1, 2012.

Lite

[edit]

In August 2009, Facebook announced the rollout of a "lite" version of the site, optimized for users on slower or intermittent Internet connections. Facebook Lite offered fewer services, excluded most third-party applications and required less bandwidth.[227] A beta version of the slimmed-down interface was released first to invited testers[228] before a broader rollout across users in the United States, Canada, and India.[227] It was announced on April 20, 2010, that support for the "lite" service had ended and that users would be redirected back to the normal, full content, Facebook website. The service was operational for only eight months.

In June 2015, this feature was reintroduced as an app with a total size of less than 1 MB, primarily focusing markets where internet access is slow or limited.[229]

Deals

[edit]

Facebook announced a pilot program called Deals, which offered online coupons and discounts from local businesses, at an event at its Palo Alto office on 3 November 2010.[230]

Deals launched on April 25, 2011, in five cities—Atlanta, Austin, Dallas, San Diego, and San Francisco—with the hope of expanding. This new offering was a direct competitor to other social commerce sites such as LivingSocial and Groupon for online coupons and deals-of-the-day. Facebook users were able to use Facebook Credits to purchase vouchers that could be redeemed for real goods and services.[231][232]

Deals expanded to Charlotte, St. Louis and Minneapolis in late June 2011.[233]

Facebook closed the Deals program on 26 August 2011, describing the product as a "test."[234]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Facebook features encompass the functionalities integrated into the social networking service operated by Meta Platforms, enabling users to build profiles, share updates, connect with contacts, and participate in group interactions, with core elements like photo uploading introduced in 2005 and the algorithmic News Feed launched in 2006 to curate personalized content streams from friends and followed entities.
Subsequent innovations, including the Like button in 2009 for streamlined engagement, Timeline profiles in 2010 for chronological life logging, and Pages in 2007 for public entities, expanded the platform's utility for both personal and commercial purposes, while later additions such as Marketplace for local trading, Facebook Live streaming in 2016, Stories for ephemeral sharing in 2017, and Reels short videos in 2021 addressed competitive pressures from rival apps and diversified revenue through advertising and e-commerce.
These features have driven Facebook's scale to billions of users by prioritizing network effects and data-driven personalization, though implementations like enhanced privacy controls and content moderation tools emerged reactively following empirical evidence of misuse in events such as data harvesting incidents and misinformation propagation, prompting ongoing refinements including AI-assisted spam reduction and passkey authentication in 2025.

Core Platform Structure

News Feed

The News Feed constitutes the primary interface on Facebook's homepage, aggregating and displaying updates, photos, videos, and other content from users' connections, followed pages, groups, and algorithmic recommendations in a scrollable stream. Launched on September 5, 2006, it transformed the platform from static profiles to a dynamic, real-time aggregation of social activity, initially compiling friends' status changes, posts, and photo uploads in reverse chronological order without user opt-in, which prompted widespread protests over perceived invasions as it exposed personal details to broader networks. Early iterations relied on chronological sorting, but by late 2009, Facebook introduced prioritization of high-engagement content to combat as user-generated posts proliferated. This evolution incorporated an informal model known as , which weighted posts based on user affinity (strength of relationships), interaction type (e.g., comments over likes), and recency decay to determine visibility, though Facebook never officially endorsed the term and later deprecated its simplified formula for more sophisticated systems. By 2011, the feed consolidated into a single algorithmic view emphasizing over timeline, supplemented by optional filters and a for peripheral updates. In its current form as of 2021, the News Feed employs multistage models processing trillions of potential posts daily, evaluating over 1,000 user-specific signals—including past engagements, post types, poster relationships, and content diversity—to predict and rank approximately 500 candidate items per session for maximal predicted interest. The system applies sequential filters: candidate generation from eligible sources, initial scoring for engagement likelihood, integrity assessments to demote or remove and low-quality material (e.g., ), and final adjustments for unread content or user-specified preferences like "See First" pinning. Subsequent updates have refined these mechanics, such as 2016 adjustments to favor friends-and-family interactions over publisher content for sustained user value, 2018 reductions in emotional reactivity to curb divisive posts, and ongoing incorporations of survey data to measure long-term satisfaction rather than short-term clicks. Core features include toggleable views (e.g., "Top Stories" for algorithmically ranked versus "Most Recent" for chronological), embedded ads comprising up to 10-20% of visible content based on auctioned relevance, and interactive elements like reactions and shares that feed back into ranking loops. These elements aim to balance personalization with platform integrity, though empirical analyses indicate persistent challenges in equitably surfacing diverse viewpoints amid engagement-driven incentives.

Profile and Timeline

The Facebook profile constitutes the foundational element of user identity on the platform, enabling registration with essential details such as full name, email address, date of birth, and gender, which are required for account creation and verification purposes. Facebook discourages maintaining multiple separate personal accounts with different logins or emails, but allows up to four additional personal profiles linked to a single main account for managing different aspects of one's online presence. Users subsequently customize their profile by uploading a profile picture, selecting a cover photo, and populating sections for biographical summaries, places lived, family relationships, education history, work experience, and interests, with options to control audience visibility through privacy settings ranging from public to friends-only or custom lists. These elements form a static informational core, distinct from dynamic content feeds, and have evolved since the platform's 2004 launch to include structured data fields that facilitate searches and connections, such as mutual friends or shared affiliations. Introduced on September 22, 2011, at Facebook's f8 developer conference, the Timeline feature restructured the profile into a chronological narrative of a user's activity, aggregating past and present posts, photos, videos, status updates, tagged content, and "life events" milestones—like graduations or relocations—into a reverse timeline view extending back to account inception. This design supplanted the earlier wall-centric layout, aiming to create an "online scrapbook" by surfacing historical content while allowing users to curate visibility, highlight key stories with starring mechanics, or conceal items via an activity log that logs all interactions for editing or deletion. Timeline integration permits apps and third-party actions to contribute to the feed under user-approved Open Graph protocols, though post-2011 updates emphasized user controls to mitigate oversharing concerns raised in early feedback. Key functionalities within the Profile and Timeline include the ability to pin top posts to the forefront for emphasis, embed such as albums or videos directly into timeline entries, and utilize "about" tabs for categorized details like favorite quotes or political views, all subject to granular tiers that default to friends-only for new content unless specified otherwise. The activity log, accessible by clicking the profile picture in the top right, selecting Settings & Privacy > Activity Log, provides a comprehensive of edits, views, and hidden elements, enabling retrospective management without altering the public-facing timeline; users can filter by Comments to view a list of their past comments with links to the original posts, and additionally search keywords via Facebook's search bar to filter old comments quickly. By 2025, these features remain central to on , supporting over 3 billion in maintaining longitudinal digital records, though algorithmic tweaks occasionally prioritize recent or starred items over strict chronology.

Friends and Connections

Facebook's friends and connections system enables users to form mutual relationships, which underpin the platform's and determine visibility of content, interactions, and notifications. Users initiate connections by sending friend requests to profiles they locate via search or mutual connections, requiring explicit acceptance from the recipient to establish the link; requests can be ignored, declined, or expire after prolonged inaction. Once accepted, the connection is bidirectional, populating each user's friends list and enabling reciprocal access to profiles, posts, and shared media subject to . Connections can be severed by unfriending, which removes the mutual link without notification to the other party, or blocking, which prevents all interaction including viewing profiles or sending messages. Friend lists provide tools for organizing connections into categories for targeted sharing and viewing. Users can create custom lists to group friends by criteria such as family, colleagues, or interests, then apply these lists to control post audience—e.g., sharing vacation photos only with a "Close Friends" subset for prioritized notifications and higher visibility in feeds. Predefined lists include "Close Friends" for enhanced engagement, "Acquaintances" for looser ties with reduced feed prominence, and "Restricted" for individuals who remain "friends" but see only public content, effectively limiting exposure without unfriending. Editing capabilities for these lists vary by platform: the Facebook mobile app limits users to adding or removing friends from existing custom or predefined lists such as Close Friends, Acquaintances, or Restricted, while creating new lists, renaming, or deleting requires the desktop version via web browser at facebook.com. The interface may vary with updates; users should check in-app Help or the Facebook Help Center for the latest information. These lists integrate with controls, allowing selective permissions for who views a user's full friends roster—options range from public to "Only Me," preventing others from seeing connections altogether; however, users cannot selectively hide specific individual friends within this visibility, as settings apply uniformly to the entire roster, while visibility of particular friendships may also be influenced by the connected friend's own privacy controls. Privacy settings further govern incoming connections and algorithmic suggestions. Users configure who can send friend requests—typically "Everyone" or "Friends of Friends"—to mitigate spam or unwanted solicitations, with new accounts often facing temporary restrictions on outbound requests to curb abuse. The "People You May Know" feature employs algorithms analyzing mutual friends, shared networks, imported contacts, and profile data to suggest potential connections, displayed in feeds or the updated Friends tab. Connection history, including sent/accepted requests, is accessible via the Activity Log under the "Connections" filter, enabling review of past interactions by date. In March 2025, Meta relaunched an enhanced Friends tab in the U.S. and , shifting from a request-focused interface to a dedicated feed surfacing posts, stories, , life events, and birthdays exclusively from confirmed friends, excluding algorithmic or suggested content. This update aims to prioritize authentic social bonds amid criticisms of feed dilution by non-personal content, with users able to pin for quick access via navigation menus. As of that rollout, the tab integrates friend request management but emphasizes ongoing engagement over discovery.

Wall

The Wall was a core feature of profiles introduced on September 1, 2004, serving as a dedicated space on a user's profile page where friends could post messages, updates, and content visible to the profile owner's network. Initially designed as an interactive public area, it functioned as the original profile feed, enabling direct communication and social interaction by allowing posts from friends to appear chronologically on the owner's , distinct from private messaging. Functionality expanded over time to include "Wall-to-Wall" posts, introduced around , which created threaded conversations between two users' profiles, displaying interactions bidirectionally for transparency in exchanges. Users could control visibility through , limiting posts to friends only or broader audiences, though early versions emphasized openness among college networks. The feature supported text, links, , and later , fostering real-time social engagement but also raising concerns over spam and unwanted content, prompting iterative tools. By 2011, the Wall evolved into the Timeline interface, which retroactively organized all profile activity—including legacy posts—into a comprehensive chronological history, effectively superseding the standalone layout while retaining post-on-profile capabilities. This transition, announced on September 22, 2011, integrated functions into a more visual, life-event-focused design, with users able to opt out initially but facing gradual rollout to over 800 million active users by early 2012. Post-Timeline, "posting to " terminology persisted in user interfaces for compatibility, but content now feeds into the unified Timeline view, reflecting 's shift toward aggregated personal narratives over isolated interaction spaces.

Likes, Reactions, and Comments

The Like feature, introduced on February 9, 2009, enables users to express positive endorsement of posts, comments, photos, or other content by selecting a thumbs-up icon, which increments a visible counter on the item. This simple interaction became integral to 's engagement model, signaling approval without requiring additional text and influencing content visibility in users' Feeds through algorithmic weighting. In February 2016, expanded the Like functionality with , adding five emoji-based options—, Haha, Wow, Sad, and Angry—to provide more nuanced emotional responses while retaining the original Like. Rolled out globally on February 24, 2016, after testing in countries including and the , appear as a dropdown accessed by long-pressing or hovering over the Like , allowing quick selection without composing a comment. These reactions contribute to metrics, with certain types like or Angry carrying different algorithmic values in prioritizing content, though all are treated as positive signals for interaction over passive views. Comments serve as the primary mechanism for detailed textual interaction on , predating Likes and available since the platform's launch as part of Wall posts and status updates. Users can reply to posts or other comments, creating threaded discussions, and include mentions via @ symbols to notify others. Features such as comment editing were added in 2016 for desktop users, enabling modifications within a short window post-submission, while threaded replies and top-level comment sorting by or recency enhance usability. Comments support multimedia attachments like stickers or GIFs and are moderated via user reports, platform algorithms, and community standards, with high-engagement comments boosting post prominence in feeds.

Communication and Interaction

Messages and Messenger

Facebook's integrated messaging system originated with Facebook Chat, launched on April 6, 2008, which permitted real-time text exchanges between users via a persistent sidebar on the , without requiring separate buddy lists. In November 2010, the company overhauled its messaging infrastructure to create a unified inbox combining web messages, , and under the @facebook.com domain, emphasizing threaded conversations over traditional email paradigms. The standalone Messenger application debuted on August 9, 2011, initially for and Android devices, separating mobile messaging from the core app to enhance performance and enable push notifications. By April 2014, Meta (then ) mandated the separate download of Messenger for accessing messages on mobile, a policy that drew user backlash but facilitated feature expansion independent of the main platform. Subsequent enhancements included voice calling introduced in January 2013 for select regions, expanding globally thereafter, and video calling rolled out on April 27, 2015, supporting cross-platform audio-visual communication without time limits. Messenger supports one-on-one and group chats accommodating up to 50 participants for video and thousands for text-based groups, with capabilities for sharing high-resolution photos, videos, files, location data, and stickers. Users can send voice messages, employ reactions, and access ephemeral "Vanish Mode" for disappearing media after viewing. Integration with bots and business accounts enables automated responses and interactions. payments via Messenger Pay launched in 2015 for U.S. users, requiring verification and limited to supported currencies. Security features evolved from optional "Secret Conversations" with introduced in 2016 to default for all personal one-on-one chats and calls, implemented starting December 6, 2023, ensuring only endpoints can decrypt content while preserving metadata for functionality like search and notifications. Group chats remain unencrypted by default to support features such as message editing and replies. Cross-platform interoperability expanded with direct messaging in 2020 and further Meta apps thereafter. As of 2023, Messenger reported over 1 billion monthly active users, underscoring its role as a primary vector for private communication on the platform.

Notifications

Notifications on Facebook alert users to activities and interactions across the platform, including friend requests, comments or reactions on their posts, mentions in content, tags in photos or videos, event invitations, birthday reminders, and updates from groups, pages, or followed individuals. These alerts serve to notify users of social engagements that may require attention, thereby fostering connectivity without necessitating continuous active use of the service. The feature relies on algorithmic prioritization to surface potentially relevant updates, drawing from user relationships and past interactions. Delivery methods encompass in-app indicators such as red alert badges displaying unread counts above the notifications menu, push notifications dispatched to mobile devices when the app runs in the background, email digests aggregating multiple updates, texts for urgent items, and desktop pop-up windows for immediate interactions like timeline posts from friends. Access occurs via a or bell in the header, with options to view all, filter by type, or mark as read. In a redesign, relocated the notifications menu to the top navigation bar, improving prominence alongside the logo and search functions. Users manage preferences through the Settings & Privacy menu under Notifications, where they can enable or disable alerts for specific categories like comments, , or group activity, and select delivery channels such as push, email, or . Complete deactivation remains unavailable, but temporary snoozing for periods like work hours or prioritization for close friends—based on interaction —mitigates volume. Experiments since around have demonstrated that curbing excessive notifications enhances satisfaction and retention, as users respond better to high-relevance alerts over frequent but low-value ones, leading to algorithmic refinements for quality over quantity. For business and page administrators, notifications extend to operational matters including ad campaign statuses, billing alerts, role changes in Business Manager, and audience insights, configurable separately to avoid overlap with personal feeds. Mobile apps like Facebook Lite offer streamlined versions with reduced data usage, while Messenger integrates distinct notification handling for direct messages, such as read receipts and typing indicators.

Groups

Facebook Groups are dedicated spaces on the platform where users can join communities centered on shared interests, hobbies, professions, or causes, facilitating discussions, content sharing, and interactions among members. Launched in their modern form on October 6, 2010, Groups evolved from earlier rudimentary versions available since the platform's inception in 2004, allowing users to create or join themed hubs distinct from personal profiles or the News Feed. By design, Groups emphasize member-driven content and moderation, with over 1.8 billion users engaging monthly as of recent estimates, underscoring their role in fostering targeted social connections beyond broad networking. Groups operate under three primary privacy settings to control visibility and access: public, in which anyone can view the group, its members, and posts without approval; private but visible (formerly closed), where the group and member list are discoverable but content requires membership approval by admins; and secret (formerly fully private), which hides the group from searches and non-members entirely, restricting access to invitations from existing members. These options enable varying degrees of exclusivity, from open forums for broad recruitment to concealed networks for sensitive or specialized discussions, with public groups numbering around 25 million active monthly as of 2025. Notifications for invitations to Facebook groups are sent to the invitee only after the invitation has been approved by a group admin, moderator, or member. Pending invitations do not trigger notifications until approval, and old pending invitations will notify only upon eventual approval, with no fixed timeframe or automatic expiration specified in official documentation. Core features include posting text, photos, videos, polls, and events; member roles such as admins (full control over settings and membership), moderators (content oversight and rule enforcement), and basic members; and integrated tools like and sub-groups for organization. Groups that enable anonymous participation allow members to post, comment, or react anonymously, with visibility following group privacy settings—private groups restrict posts to members only, while public groups allow non-members to view posts, but the poster's identity is hidden (displayed as "Anonymous member" or "Anonymous participant"). Admins can establish custom rules, pin announcements, and utilize Admin Assist, an AI-driven tool introduced to automate post and comment moderation based on predefined criteria such as keyword filters or spam detection, reducing manual oversight while adapting via to group-specific patterns. Additional management capabilities encompass pausing groups temporarily, reviewing pending content, tracking moderation history to maintain order, particularly in larger communities prone to spam or influx, and enabling, customizing, or disabling the AI assistant feature via group settings, often accessible in the mobile app. Groups support monetization for creators through features like paid subscriptions and since 2021, alongside for metrics, though these are more prominent in professional or creator-focused tabs. Despite their utility for organic , Groups have faced scrutiny for hosting unmoderated or coordinated activities, prompting Meta to enhance proactive tools like automatic post declines for violations flagged by algorithms. Overall, with Facebook's global user base exceeding 3 billion monthly actives in 2025, Groups remain a cornerstone for niche interaction, though their efficacy depends on vigilant admin practices amid platform-wide content challenges.

Events

Facebook Events is a feature enabling users to create, discover, and manage gatherings, including in-person and online events, by generating dedicated pages with specified details such as title, date, time, location or link, and description. To create an event on a computer, users click Events in the left menu, click Create new event in the top right, choose whether the event is online or in person, fill in the event info including name, details, location or link, date and time, and privacy settings, then click Create event. On the mobile app, users tap the menu (three lines) then tap Events, tap Create in the top right, follow prompts to add event details and choose privacy, then tap Create. Additional options include adding a cover photo, inviting people after creation, and for online events, adding a video link. Users invite participants via friends lists, groups, or public postings, with RSVPs tracked through responses of "Going," "Interested," or "Not Attending" to gauge attendance. Event pages support multimedia uploads like photos and videos, alongside comment threads for discussions and coordination. Privacy controls allow creators to set events as public for broad discovery, invite-only for targeted groups, or private with restricted access, influencing search visibility and join permissions. Integration with Pages permits businesses to host official events that appear in dedicated tabs, facilitating ticketing partnerships and automated RSVPs for performers or teams. Users receive notifications for updates, reminders, and nearby suggestions based on location and interests, enhancing participation. The core Events functionality originated as an early platform tool for social coordination, with a standalone discovery app launched on , , to aggregate invites, RSVPs, and calendar-syncing options. This app was rebranded to Facebook Local in November 2017, incorporating venue searches alongside events before being discontinued in favor of in-app experiences. Businesses leverage for promotion, , and engagement tracking, often combining with ads for targeted reach.

Poke and Other Greetings

The Poke feature, launched alongside Facebook in 2004, enables users to send a brief notification to another user, functioning as a virtual nudge to initiate contact or express casual interest without requiring a message. Originally ambiguous in purpose—often interpreted as flirtatious or friendly—it gained popularity in Facebook's early years as a low-commitment interaction tool, with users able to respond by poking back or viewing poke histories via a dedicated page. The feature's origins remain unclear but are believed to mimic physical poking for attention, predating more structured interactions like likes or comments. Despite waning usage as Facebook evolved, Poke persisted and saw targeted revivals. In March 2024, search enhancements increased poke activity by a factor of 13, prompting further updates in September to integrate elements like poke-tracking for younger demographics, aiming to leverage amid competition from platforms like . As of , users access it by searching "pokes" or navigating profiles, though adoption remains niche compared to core features. Facebook has tested supplementary greetings to expand beyond Poke, emphasizing quick, non-verbal interactions. In December 2017, prototypes included holding a "Hello" button to select options like , , high-five, or Poke itself, with an undo mechanism for errors; these aimed to refresh Poke's appeal but saw limited rollout. By December 2024, further iterations incorporated wave—an existing hand-wave —alongside , high-five, and , positioning them as Poke variants for varied . Wave, in particular, serves as a simpler, -based alternative accessible via reactions or direct messaging, though none of these expanded greetings achieved Poke's longevity or cultural footprint.

Content Sharing and Media

Photos and Albums

Facebook's photos feature, launched in May 2005, enabled users to images directly to their profiles with initially unlimited storage capacity but without the ability to tag individuals in photos. Tagging functionality was introduced later that year, allowing users to identify and link other profiles within images, which facilitated social interaction and photo organization. By grouping uploaded photos into customizable albums, users could categorize content thematically, such as by events or dates, with albums serving as dedicated containers for multiple images accessible via profile sections. Albums support bulk uploads, with individual posts limited to around 80-100 depending on file sizes and platform interface, though albums themselves can hold up to 10,000 images following updates that expanded prior limits of 1,000 per . controls allow owners to restrict visibility to specific audiences, including public, friends-only, or custom lists, with options to edit settings for individual or post-upload. Users can also tag pages, brands, or products in starting from May 2011, extending the feature's utility beyond personal networks to commercial contexts. – note: while is not cited as primary, this aligns with contemporaneous reports of the rollout. In 2013, Facebook introduced shared albums, permitting up to 50 collaborators per album, each able to contribute up to 200 photos, enabling collective curation for events like weddings or trips while maintaining owner-controlled privacy and editing rights. These albums integrate with profile timelines, allowing chronological display alongside other content, and support features like commenting, liking individual photos, and generating slideshows or downloads for participants. Despite enhancements, upload limits and interface variations across devices—such as mobile apps capping single-session uploads—persist, prompting workarounds like multi-album creation for large collections. Overall, the system prioritizes user-controlled organization and sharing, with backend optimizations handling petabytes of image data stored on Meta's infrastructure.

Videos and Reels

Facebook's video features enable users to upload, share, and view video content natively on the platform, supporting files up to 240 minutes in length with a maximum file size of 4 GB. These capabilities include standard playback in the News Feed, Stories, and other placements, with technical requirements such as H.264 codec for compatibility and optional captions to improve accessibility. Video uploads must adhere to minimum resolutions of 120 pixels in width and height to ensure proper rendering across devices. Reels represent Facebook's short-form video format, designed for quick, engaging content similar to competitors like , with integrated editing tools for adding music, effects, text overlays, and transitions. Initially launched in the United States on September 29, 2021, for and Android users, Reels emphasized creator tools for producing entertaining videos up to 60 seconds at debut, later extended to 90 seconds by 2023. The feature expanded globally to over 150 countries on February 22, 2022, incorporating options like for collaborating on existing videos and direct sharing to . In a significant update on June 17, 2025, unified its video ecosystem by converting all video uploads—regardless of length or aspect ratio—into format, eliminating prior restrictions on short-form content and allowing seamless sharing of long-form videos under the umbrella while preserving user audience controls. This change aims to streamline creation and discovery, with now supporting drafts, clipping, and scheduling tools to facilitate production. As of October 7, 2025, algorithmic enhancements provide users with greater control over recommended videos, including AI-driven search suggestions and customizable friend interaction bubbles to prioritize relevant content. Technical specifications for uploads require vertical or square orientations for optimal performance, with content guidelines prohibiting violations of community standards to maintain platform integrity.

Stories

Facebook Stories enables users to post ephemeral photo and video content visible for 24 hours before automatic deletion, displayed in a vertical full-screen format at the top of the app's news feed. Launched on March 28, 2017, the feature was introduced to compete with Snapchat's Stories by integrating similar temporary sharing mechanics into 's core app, following prior implementations in , Messenger, and . Users create Stories by capturing live content via the in-app camera or uploading existing media, with options to add text overlays, drawings, filters, stickers, location tags, polls, questions for audience interaction, countdowns, and music tracks from licensed libraries. Content supports boomerang-style looping videos and hands-free recording modes, and multiple clips can be combined into a sequence. Stories appear in a dedicated horizontal tray above the main feed, tappable for sequential viewing, with viewers able to react via taps or direct messages. allow sharing with all friends, custom lists, or public audiences, and archiving enables saving to a private collection post-expiration. Cross-platform integration permits automatic syndication of Instagram Stories to Facebook since October 2017, streamlining content distribution across Meta's ecosystem. Businesses gained scheduling capabilities for Stories via Business Suite in June 2021, facilitating pre-planned ephemeral campaigns. By mid-2018, Stories reached 150 million daily viewers, growing to over 500 million daily engagements reported consistently through 2024, though Meta has not publicly updated precise figures since emphasizing and other formats. The format prioritizes casual, real-time sharing over permanent posts, with view counts and spectator lists providing engagement metrics. Unlike persistent feed content, Stories evade algorithmic demotion risks tied to low interaction, fostering higher completion rates for short-form vertical media. Adoption reflects broader trends in mobile-first consumption, though usage trails Stories due to demographic overlaps and platform-specific habits.

Live Streaming

Facebook Live is a feature enabling users to broadcast real-time video content from personal profiles, Pages, Groups, or Events directly within the platform. Initially launched on August 5, 2015, as a limited rollout to verified public figures such as celebrities, it expanded globally to all users on April 6, 2016. The service supports interactive elements, including real-time viewer comments, reactions, and questions, fostering direct engagement during broadcasts. Technical specifications include streams up to 8 hours in length, using RTMPS protocol with video codec at resolutions up to and 30 FPS, requiring a minimum bitrate for stable transmission. Users can initiate streams via mobile apps or desktop with compatible encoders connected to Live , allowing for professional setups with external software. Monetization options integrate with broader content earnings tools, such as Stars—virtual badges purchased by viewers and sent during streams, convertible to revenue for creators—and in-stream ads eligible on qualifying videos. Eligibility requires adherence to content policies, with Pages or profiles checked for violations via Meta's tools; as of 2025, unified Content Monetization beta encompasses Live alongside and other formats for simplified payouts. Usage has grown steadily, with live video consumption on the platform increasing over 50% in compared to prior years, reflecting sustained adoption for events, Q&A sessions, and . Beginning February 2025, archived Live videos on Pages and profiles are stored for 30 days post-broadcast, enabling replays and downloads within that window before automatic deletion unless manually saved.

Facebook Watch

Facebook Watch is a dedicated video platform within the app and website, designed to facilitate the discovery, viewing, and sharing of video content including episodic shows, live streams, user-generated videos, and professional programming. Launched as a response to growing video consumption on , it emphasizes personalized recommendations and community interaction around content. The platform was announced on August 9, 2017, with an initial rollout to a limited group of U.S. users starting the following day across mobile, desktop, and TV apps. It positioned itself as a hub for creators and publishers to build audiences and monetize through ad , initially focusing on original "shows" in a serialized format to encourage repeat viewership. By late August 2017, the Watch tab became visible to more U.S. users, featuring dozens of original programs from partners. In 2018, Facebook Watch expanded globally, making it available in every country, and broadened access to include videos from all Pages rather than select partners only. This shift integrated a wider range of content types, such as live events, sports, , music videos, and short-form clips, while introducing algorithmic feeds tailored to user interests for enhanced discovery. Features like "Watch Together" were added in September 2020, allowing synchronized video watching with friends via Messenger video calls to foster social viewing experiences. Monetization for creators on Watch occurs primarily through in-stream advertisements, where eligible publishers retain 55% of from ads displayed during videos, with taking 45%. The platform supports various formats to attract creators, including long-form series and live content, contributing to 's overall video that generated significant ad , with global digital ad spend on the platform projected at $116.53 billion in 2025. As of 2025, Watch continues to evolve within Meta's video strategy, integrating with tools like content recommendations powered by to prioritize engaging, community-driven videos over passive consumption.

Commerce and Professional Tools

Marketplace

Facebook Marketplace is a peer-to-peer commerce platform integrated into the app, enabling users to list, browse, and transact for second-hand goods, vehicles, property, and services primarily within local geographic areas. Launched on October 3, 2016, initially in the United States, , , and , it expanded globally to over 70 countries by 2025, positioning itself as a competitor to classifieds sites like and . The feature leverages users' existing social connections, location data, and profiles to facilitate trust through mutual friends and profile verification, though transactions occur off-platform without built-in payment processing from . Listings are created via a dedicated tab or composer tool, supporting categories such as , , furniture, vehicles, and , with options for photos, descriptions, prices, and shipping indicators—though local pickup remains predominant. A monetary price is required for all listings, and there is no dedicated option for barter, trade, or swap. To indicate interest in trades or swaps, sellers can mention it clearly in the item description (e.g., "Open to trades for [specific items]" or "Will consider swaps"). For explicit bartering or swapping without requiring a price, local Facebook buy/sell/trade groups are recommended instead. Listings do not feature public comment sections; users interact by sending private messages to sellers via Facebook Messenger to ask questions, negotiate, or discuss items, maintaining privacy and safety in communications. To do so, open the listing and select the "Message" button to initiate a chat. After a transaction, users can leave ratings and reviews on profiles. Users filter searches by proximity, price, condition (new, used, or refurbished), and keywords; searching for common misspellings, such as "coutch" for "couch" or "dinning table" for "dining table", can uncover low-competition listings from casual sellers, as the search engine does not aggressively autocorrect. Algorithmic recommendations are based on past activity and location. By 2025, Marketplace attracted approximately 1.1 billion monthly , representing a significant portion of Facebook's 3.07 billion total monthly active users, with high engagement among younger demographics for quick, low-cost local sales. Safety features include profile authenticity checks, reporting tools for suspicious listings, and guidelines prohibiting illegal items like weapons or drugs, enforced through automated detection and user flags leading to removals or bans. However, the platform has faced persistent issues with scams, including fake listings using stolen photos, overpayment schemes via apps like or , and demands for advance payments or gift cards, with reports indicating thousands of daily fraudulent attempts. advises in-person meetings at public spots, cash transactions, and avoiding wire transfers, but lacks or , contributing to user losses estimated in millions annually from unverified peer deals. An earlier iteration of operated from 2007 to 2008 before discontinuation due to low adoption, replaced by third-party integrations until the 2016 relaunch.

Shops

Facebook Shops is an e-commerce feature launched by on May 19, 2020, allowing businesses to establish free, customizable online storefronts directly within and apps. Designed as a mobile-first experience, it enables sellers to upload product catalogs, organize items into collections, and display them via dedicated shop tabs on their Pages or profiles. The rollout aimed to assist small businesses transitioning to online sales amid the economic disruptions, with initial availability in the United States and gradual expansion to other markets. Setup occurs through Commerce Manager, Meta's centralized dashboard for managing catalogs, inventory, orders, and sales across platforms. Businesses connect existing product feeds or create new ones, specifying details like , , and shipping; eligibility requires compliance with Meta's commerce policies, including verified accounts and adherence to prohibited items lists. Once configured, Shops integrate with discovery tools such as algorithmic feeds, Stories, , and targeted ads, where products appear in immersive formats like product carousels or shoppable posts. Customers interact by browsing collections, viewing high-resolution images and descriptions, and adding items to carts; checkout supports in-app payments in supported regions via Meta Pay or redirects to external websites for fulfillment. Advanced functionalities include dynamic ads pulling from catalogs for retargeting, live shopping events for real-time demonstrations, and analytics tracking metrics like views, add-to-carts, and conversions. As of 2023, Meta has emphasized options, such as buy-online-pickup-in-store () integrations, displaying nearby store availability within ads and product listings. However, platform policies mandate transparent data practices, with sellers responsible for , returns, and outside Meta's ecosystem.

Fundraising

Facebook's fundraising tools allow individuals, verified nonprofits, and Pages to create campaigns supporting personal causes or charitable organizations. Launched with charitable donation features in 2015 and expanded to personal fundraisers in 2016, these tools have enabled over 100 million fundraisers to raise more than $7 billion for various causes as of 2023. Personal fundraisers support categories including medical treatments, educational or travel expenses, sports teams, student initiatives, and pet care. Users set up campaigns by providing a description, images, goal amount, and end date, then share via posts, Stories, or prompts to solicit donations from their network. Donations occur through Pay or linked methods, with funds disbursed via Stripe to a verified in eligible countries, typically 6 business days after receipt plus 1-5 days for bank processing. For nonprofits, verified entities can add "Donate" buttons to their Pages, enable supporter-created fundraisers, and integrate with challenges or group events. Meta does not charge platform fees on any donations, but processing fees are deducted for personal causes; the company covers these fees for nonprofit donations outside , , the , and the . Features like Live video fundraisers and Stories integration enhance reach, while user data such as past donations informs personalized suggestions. Availability restrictions apply: as of July 1, 2024, fundraising tools for charities are unavailable in the due to regulatory changes. Payer protection policies exist to handle disputes, and organizers must comply with category guidelines to avoid removal.

Pages and Professional Mode

Pages are public profiles designed for businesses, brands, organizations, and public figures to broadcast content and foster interactions with broad audiences, distinct from personal profiles limited to friends. Launched in November 2007 alongside the introduction of Ads, Pages enable administrators to publish posts, media, and updates that followers can like, comment on, and share, facilitating scalable engagement. To create a Page, a personal Facebook account is required. Users log in to facebook.com or open the app, navigate to the menu (three lines or profile icon) in the upper right, select "Pages" then "Create," or visit https://www.facebook.com/pages/create directly. Next, select the page type such as Business or Brand, Community or Public Figure, or Entertainment. Provide a page name, select a category, and add a description (bio). Upload a profile picture and cover photo (optional but recommended). Finally, click "Create Page" to complete and publish. Once created, administrators can post and manage content as admins. Core functionalities include displaying verifiable business details such as addresses, phone numbers, operating hours, categories, and custom usernames to aid searchability and credibility. Administrators gain access to Facebook Insights, providing metrics on post reach, engagement rates, follower growth, and demographic breakdowns to inform content strategies. Additional tools support advertising integration, event creation, and shop setups for direct commerce. In January 2021, Meta introduced the New Pages Experience, updating classic Pages with a simplified interface, dedicated follower news feeds, Q&A features, and streamlined admin tools to prioritize professional management over legacy community pages. Professional Mode extends similar capabilities to personal profiles, allowing eligible users—primarily creators and public figures—to activate a professional overlay without migrating to a dedicated Page. Rolled out in beta to U.S. creators in December 2021 and expanded globally by November 2022, it unlocks insights into content performance, audience demographics, and growth analytics, alongside pathways like in-stream ads and fan subscriptions. For anonymous or faceless content creators, a Page is generally more suitable than a personal profile. Pages allow custom branding (e.g., faceless name, no personal photo required), public visibility, and tools for audience reach, insights, and monetization. Personal profiles require authentic real names and are intended for individuals, potentially exposing personal details; Professional Mode adds creator features like followers and public posts but maintains the tie to personal identity. Pages must be managed via a personal profile, limiting full anonymity due to the managing account's real-name requirement and Page transparency features. Unlike Pages, which Meta recommends for business or brand representation to maintain separation from personal activity, Professional Mode integrates public tools into existing profiles, preserving friend connections while adding follower counts and promotional features for individuals. Users can enable or disable it via profile settings, with toggling off suspending but retaining historical data; it targets for influencers rather than corporate entities.

Jobs and Hiring Features

Facebook's jobs and hiring features primarily consist of tools for posting job openings, searching listings, and targeted advertising to facilitate recruitment. These capabilities were first introduced in 2017 as "Facebook Jobs," enabling businesses to create free postings on Pages and Groups, with applicants submitting via Messenger integration. The initial rollout aimed to leverage Facebook's user base for local and small-business hiring, though adoption varied due to competition from specialized platforms. Following a pause, direct job postings were discontinued in 2023, shifting emphasis to ads and external links. On October 13, 2025, Meta relaunched the service as "Local Jobs" for U.S. users, embedding it within Marketplace, Groups, and Pages to prioritize nearby, entry-level opportunities for young adults and small businesses. All listings remain publicly visible, allowing individuals or companies to post via personal profiles or Pages without fees, with seekers able to filter by distance, job type, and category. Inquiries occur through direct messaging or external applications, emphasizing community-based discovery over algorithmic matching. Complementing organic postings, Meta's advertising suite supports paid job promotions via Facebook and Instagram, using demographic targeting for skills, location, and interests to reach candidates. Businesses can track ad performance through Meta Business Suite, including application metrics, though effectiveness depends on ad creative and audience precision rather than platform guarantees. As of 2025, these tools integrate with Pages' professional mode for branded recruitment, but lack advanced applicant tracking systems compared to dedicated HR software. Expansion beyond the U.S. remains planned but unconfirmed.

Gaming

Facebook Gaming provides tools for live streaming gameplay, watching gaming content, and playing browser-based games directly within the platform. Users can broadcast sessions using compatible software encoders such as OBS or , with streams accessible via dedicated gaming pages or the main interface. The service supports interaction through comments, reactions, and viewer donations via , a for supporting creators during live or on-demand videos. Instant Games form a core component, consisting of HTML5-based titles playable without downloads in the News Feed, , or gaming hub. These games emphasize social elements, including multiplayer modes, score sharing with friends, and Instant Tournaments that enable competitive brackets and leaderboards to foster discovery and repeated engagement. Developers leverage the Games SDK to integrate features like in-app purchases, interstitial ads via the Audience Network, and player notifications for retention. Additional features include gaming groups for community discussions and coordination, on-demand video libraries for archived streams, and tools for cross-promotion with or other content formats. Monetization extends to subscriptions, in-stream ads, and revenue from in-app purchases, though these are subject to platform policies and eligibility. In October 2025, Meta discontinued the Facebook Gaming Creator Program, retaining core streaming and access until 2026 while shifting emphasis to broader creator tools. Monthly, the platform sees over 700 million interactions across playing, viewing, and group activities.

Search, Discovery, and Advanced Tools

Graph Search is a semantic search engine introduced by Facebook on January 15, 2013, enabling users to query their social connections using natural language phrases tied to profile data, such as "friends who work at [company]" or "photos of [person] liked by [mutual friend]." Initially launched as a beta for a limited number of users, it leveraged Facebook's graph database structure to deliver personalized results distinct from keyword-based web searches, focusing instead on indexed social graph elements like relationships, interests, and activities. The feature expanded over time to include searchable , places visited by friends, and interests, with planned additions for wall posts and music listens, though determined visibility. By July 8, 2013, Graph Search rolled out to all U.S. users after refinements from its beta phase, emphasizing social discovery over general web content. Early development traced back to prototypes influenced by Facebook's 2010 Graph tags standard, positioning it as a tool to rival broader search engines by prioritizing first-degree connections. Privacy safeguards were implemented shortly after launch, including restrictions preventing adults from searching for teenagers without mutual connections, amid concerns over potential misuse for or data exposure. described Graph Search as an ongoing multiyear initiative to integrate deeper search capabilities, but by December 2014, its dedicated interface became less prominent, with functionalities absorbed into the platform's standard search bar. The original Graph Search tool ceased operation for third-party access in June 2019, reflecting shifts toward unified search experiences and restrictions, though core social querying persisted in evolved forms.

Recommendations and AI Discovery

Facebook's recommendation systems leverage to facilitate discovery of friends, pages, groups, and content by analyzing user interactions, social graphs, and behavioral signals. The "People You May Know" feature, powered by AI models, suggests potential connections primarily through mutual friends, shared networks, and inferred interests derived from graph neural networks and preference modeling. Similarly, "Pages You May Like" employs comparable algorithms to recommend pages based on personalized factors including shared connections such as common friends, user activity and interests, interaction history, content similarity, and avoidance of low-quality or violating content, aiding professional and interest-based discovery. Content recommendations appear in the News Feed under "Suggested for you," drawing from unconnected sources outside a user's followed entities or network. These suggestions are generated by evaluating factors such as past engagements (e.g., comments, shares), high-engagement content from similar user cohorts, and regional popularity trends, with AI predicting relevance to maximize session time. Over 20% of Feed content consists of such AI-recommended unconnected posts, as noted by Meta CEO during a 2023 earnings call, enabling broader interest exploration while expanding creator reach. Advancements in AI discovery include specialized models for multimodal content understanding, such as Multiscale Vision Transformers (MViT) for video analysis in and cross-lingual models like XLM-R for text, integrated into hierarchical deep neural retrieval systems. These contributed to a 15% uplift in watch time on during Fall 2022 testing, alongside reduced user dissatisfaction metrics like hide rates. The core follows a four-step : curating an inventory of eligible content, assessing signals (e.g., recency, poster relationship), forecasting engagement probabilities via predictions, and applying relevance scores to rank outputs. Meta published system cards in June 2023 outlining AI architectures for these features, including Feed ranking and cold-start handling for new entities via the Meta Interest Learner. Users lack a global disable option for suggestions but can mitigate visibility by hiding posts, snoozing pages for 30 days, or unfollowing sources, though algorithmic adaptation may persist based on residual signals.

Subscribe Feature

The Subscribe feature enables Facebook users to follow public updates from other profiles without requiring a mutual , functioning as a one-way following mechanism akin to Twitter's model. Introduced on September 14, 2011, it addressed limitations in Facebook's friend-based network by allowing broader dissemination of public content to non-friends, thereby removing the previous cap of 5,000 friends for sharing updates. Profile owners activate the feature through by enabling "Allow people to subscribe to your public updates" and selecting post visibility options, after which a Subscribe button appears on their profile page alongside and Poke buttons. Subscribers receive those public posts in their news feed, with customizable prioritization modes including "Most Recent" for chronological order, "" for algorithmically selected key updates, or "Default" for standard feed integration. Users can unfollow at any time, and subscriptions do not grant reciprocal access to the subscriber's content. The rollout began with select high-profile users to test scalability before wider availability, aiming to enhance content discovery for public figures, journalists, and celebrities while giving followers granular control over feed clutter. In December 2011, Facebook extended functionality by launching an embeddable Subscribe button for external websites, permitting one-click profile subscriptions directly from third-party pages without redirecting to . This plugin targeted publishers and influencers seeking to grow audiences beyond the platform. Distinct from later monetized "Subscriptions" offerings for pages—introduced in 2019 for recurring fan payments in exchange for exclusive content—the original Subscribe feature remains free and focused on organic discovery without financial incentives. Its adoption facilitated asymmetric connections, though usage has declined with the rise of algorithmic feeds and platform shifts toward pages, where "Follow" buttons supplanted similar mechanics by 2020.

Hashtags and Tagging

Facebook introduced hashtags on June 12, 2013, as a mechanism to enhance public conversations and content discoverability across the platform. By prefixing words or phrases with the "#" symbol in posts, comments, or photo captions, users create clickable links that aggregate and display all related content using the same hashtag, allowing individuals to explore trending topics or follow discussions without relying solely on personal connections. This feature mirrored implementations on platforms like but adapted to Facebook's emphasis on social graphs, initially rolling out to public posts before expanding to enable broader searchability. Over time, hashtag functionality has persisted but with evolving algorithmic weight; while still enabling topic-based discovery, their influence on post visibility has lessened as Facebook's feed prioritizes user engagement, relevance, and over hashtag volume. Users are advised to employ 1-3 relevant hashtags per post for optimal categorization without diluting algorithmic performance, as excessive use can signal spammy intent and reduce reach. Hashtags do not inherently boost distribution to non-followers but aid in indexing content for searches and recommendations. Tagging, a core interaction tool since Facebook's early development, permits users to associate posts, photos, or videos with specific profiles, Pages, or locations, notifying the tagged party and potentially surfacing the content on their timeline subject to . When tagging individuals, the system generates a link to their profile and sends an alert, facilitating direct mentions via "@" symbols in text or manual selection in media uploads. Page tagging extends this to businesses or entities, enhancing promotional reach, while location tagging integrates with check-ins to contextualize posts geographically. Significant updates to tagging include the 2011 expansion to tag Pages and brands directly in photos, improving commercial utility, and the 2021 discontinuation of facial recognition for automatic photo tagging suggestions, which affected over 1 billion users' stored templates and shifted reliance to manual input for privacy reasons. This change eliminated proactive identification in images but preserved core manual tagging, with notifications and timeline integrations intact unless users opt out via settings. Tagging remains integral for social coordination, though overuse can trigger spam filters, limiting notifications or visibility.

Privacy, Security, and Moderation

Privacy Controls and Settings

Facebook users can control the visibility of their content and profile information through granular settings that determine audience access. The audience selector tool allows selection of visibility options such as , Friends, Friends except specific users, Specific friends, or Only Me for individual posts, stories, and profile updates. This feature, accessible via a dropdown icon when composing or editing content, enables retroactive adjustments to past posts by selecting the post's options menu and choosing "Change Audience." By default, profile and cover photos are set to , though users can limit other biographical details like places lived or relationships using per-item audience selectors in the About section. Users can also limit who can like or comment on public profile information, such as profile and cover photos, via settings under Followers and Public Content, with options of Public, Friends of Friends, or Friends (default Friends). This restricts future likes and comments but does not hide or remove existing ones or the visible counts. Reaction count hiding settings apply only to posts and reels, not profile pictures. The Checkup tool provides a guided review of core settings, covering who can see shared content, profile visibility, and basic security elements to ensure alignment with user preferences. Accessed via Settings & > Privacy Checkup, it prompts users to verify audience defaults, tagging permissions, and off-platform discoverability, helping to restrict exposure systematically. For broader data management, the Download Your Information feature allows users to request a copy of their posts, photos, messages, and other data in various formats, with processing times ranging from minutes to days depending on volume. Additional controls include limiting search visibility by adjusting who can find the user via or phone number under Settings > and > How People Find and Contact You, which defaults to allowing searches from anyone with matching contact info. The "View As" tool lets users preview their profile from another person's perspective, revealing public-facing elements without altering settings. On desktop, users access it by going to their profile, clicking the three dots below the cover photo near "Edit Profile", and selecting "View As" to preview the public view; to exit, select the option to return to normal view. A "Limit Past Posts" option, found in Settings > Posts, retroactively sets all previous posts to Friends-only visibility in one action, addressing historical oversharing. These tools, introduced and refined since the settings redesign, emphasize user-directed over platform defaults that favor broader sharing.

Security Features

Facebook's security features primarily focus on safeguarding user accounts against unauthorized access, , and hacking attempts through multi-layered and monitoring tools. These features evolved in response to growing threats, with early implementations emphasizing optional protections that became more robust over time. Core mechanisms include notifications for suspicious activity and requirements for additional verification, which have been standard since the platform's expansion in the early . Two-factor authentication (2FA), introduced in April 2011 as an opt-in layer, requires users to enter a time-sensitive code from a trusted device or app after providing their password during login attempts. This adds a second verification step to prevent account compromise even if credentials are stolen, and it supports methods like SMS, authenticator apps (enhanced in 2018 with options such as ), and security keys. By December 2021, Meta mandated 2FA for high-risk accounts prone to targeting by nation-state actors or sophisticated threats, such as those of journalists and defenders. Login alerts notify users via or app push of unrecognized attempts, including details like and device, enabling immediate response such as changes or reporting. Complementing this, approvals—part of the 2FA suite—prompt users to confirm new device logins explicitly, blocking access until approved. These were among the initial tools rolled out in 2011 to counter and credential theft. The Security Checkup tool, accessible via account settings, guides users through reviewing active sessions, connected devices, and recovery options, recommending actions like logging out from unfamiliar locations or updating passwords. It promotes best practices such as using unique, strong passwords (at least 8 characters with mixed case, numbers, and symbols) and avoiding suspicious links. For vulnerable or high-profile users, the Advanced Protection program streamlines adoption of stringent measures, including keys and mandatory 2FA, targeting accounts at elevated risk without requiring manual configuration complexity. Similarly, Protect extends these to political candidates, campaigns, and officials, enforcing 2FA and providing phishing-resistant alerts; it was formalized post-2016 election concerns to mitigate foreign interference. Users can report suspected hacks or suspicious activity directly through help interfaces, triggering investigations and potential account locks. While employs server-side for data in transit and at rest, it does not offer for core feed interactions, relying instead on these access controls. Regular updates to these features address emerging threats, though adoption remains user-dependent, with empirical data showing enabled 2FA reduces successful breaches significantly.

Off-Facebook Activity

Off-Facebook Activity is a privacy tool provided by (now ) that displays a summary of shared with the platform by third-party apps and websites regarding users' interactions outside of . This includes actions such as visiting partner sites embedded with pixels, logging into external services using credentials, or engaging with content that tracks user identifiers like or device IDs. The feature aims to enhance user transparency into how off-platform behavior informs 's ad targeting and personalization algorithms. The tool was first announced at Facebook's F8 developer conference in May 2018 under the initial concept of "," with limited rollout beginning in August 2019 in select countries including , , and . Global availability expanded to all users on January 28, 2020, following regulatory pressures and privacy scandals like that heightened scrutiny on data sharing practices. By design, it aggregates information from over 100 partner organizations that voluntarily share activity logs with via APIs or tracking mechanisms. Data collection occurs when third parties transmit hashed or identifiable signals to , linking them to user accounts based on prior logins or persistent trackers; this summary covers up to 180 days of activity but does not reveal granular details like specific page views to avoid overwhelming users. processes this input to infer interests for , though the tool itself does not halt collection—partners continue sending data unless users block trackers independently. Processing can take up to 48 hours to compile visible summaries, during which real-time tracking persists. Users access the feature via 's Settings & menu under "Your Information," where they can review categorized summaries (e.g., by advertiser), select and clear specific histories to disconnect from ad profiles, or enable "Disconnect Future Activity" to prevent off- data from influencing future targeting—though retains the raw data for compliance or aggregated . Clearing past activity removes associations but does not delete data from partners' servers or erase 's internal copies used pre-clearance. As of 2025, disabling future activity reduces but does not eliminate cross-site profiling, as device fingerprinting or other unlinked methods may still enable . Critics, including the , describe the tool as an incremental improvement in user agency but insufficient for true , as it places the onus on individuals to navigate complex opt-outs rather than curtailing pervasive tracking at the source; the EFF notes that without prohibiting data merges or mandating defaults-off settings, it perpetuates reliance on targeted ads funded by unconsented . Empirical analyses confirm that even post-disconnect, ad may not fully degrade due to on-platform data dominance and probabilistic matching. No peer-reviewed studies quantify exact efficacy reductions in profiling post-use, but user reports indicate partial mitigation of personalized ads.

Content Moderation and Community Notes

Facebook's content moderation relies on a hybrid system of algorithms and human reviewers to detect and address violations of its Community Standards, which encompass prohibitions against , , , spam, and other risks to user safety. Automated tools analyze uploads in real-time, flagging potential issues such as graphic imagery or prohibited text before content reaches audiences, while human moderators appeals and complex determinations. Page administrators can configure custom moderation tools, including profanity filters, keyword blocks, and age or country restrictions for comments. Users contribute to moderation through reporting mechanisms, enabling the platform to prioritize investigations into flagged posts, profiles, or groups. In cases of disputed removals, an appeals process allows creators to contest decisions, with outcomes informed by policy updates derived from enforcement data; for instance, Meta reported action on over 20 million pieces of content quarterly in recent transparency reports. In January 2025, Meta discontinued its U.S.-based third-party partnerships, which had involved independent organizations labeling disputed claims, citing a shift toward reducing over-moderation and enabling broader speech. This transition introduced , a crowdsourced feature permitting users on , , and Threads to propose contextual annotations for posts deemed confusing or misleading. Community Notes operate via a contributor where eligible participants—initially seeded from diverse demographics—draft and rate proposed notes; a note displays publicly only if a broad consensus deems it helpful, using an open-source adapted from X's technology to minimize through cross-ideological agreement thresholds. Testing commenced in March 2025, with full rollout by September 2025, including notifications for users who engaged with annotated posts. By mid-2025, Meta reported thousands of notes generated, though independent evaluations noted variable efficacy in curbing falsehoods compared to prior . The feature aims to decentralize verification, prioritizing empirical consensus over centralized judgments, amid criticisms that legacy amplified institutional biases.

AI and Emerging Features

Meta AI Integration

Meta AI, an assistant developed by Meta and powered by the Llama 3 , became available within on April 18, 2024, enabling users to interact with it directly in chats, search functions, and the platform's feed for tasks such as querying real-time information and generating responses. This integration positions as a conversational tool akin to interacting with another user, accessible via dedicated entry points like a blue chat bubble icon in Messenger-integrated sections of . Key features include text-based querying for assistance with planning, fact-checking, or content summarization, with expansions to voice interactions announced on , 2024, allowing users to speak to on and receive audible replies through connected apps like Messenger. The assistant supports multilingual capabilities and draws from publicly available data, though Meta has implemented mechanisms for training data usage from user posts, subject to regional regulations; for instance, users faced restrictions on opting out of data processing for AI training effective May 27, 2025, following regulatory adjustments. Interactions remain end-to-end encrypted where applicable in private chats, but public or group engagements contribute to model refinement unless users adjust . By October 2024, Meta AI's rollout extended to additional countries on , enhancing accessibility for non-U.S. users previously limited by phased deployment. Starting December 16, 2025, Meta began incorporating user interactions with the AI—such as conversation topics—into algorithms personalizing content recommendations and advertisements, excluding regions like the , , and due to data protection laws; this shift aims to improve relevance but has prompted scrutiny over implicit data leveraging for commercial purposes. A standalone Meta AI app launched on April 29, 2025, complements in-app integration by providing a dedicated interface for initiating sessions that can sync across , including seamless transitions from queries to mobile app continuations. Despite these advancements, the feature's reliance on large-scale has raised concerns among advocates regarding potential overreach, though Meta maintains that safeguards like transparency tools and deletion options mitigate risks.

AI-Powered Editing and Suggestions

Facebook introduced an AI-powered feature on October 17, 2025, enabling to suggest edits, collages, and recaps for and videos stored in users' camera rolls, even those not yet shared on the platform. This opt-in tool scans unpublished media on the device, uploads selected content to Meta's cloud servers for processing, and generates personalized suggestions such as custom photo collages, event-themed recaps, or enhanced edits to highlight "hidden gems" from users' libraries. The feature aims to simplify content creation by surfacing ready-to-share visuals directly in the app, with initial rollout limited to . Prior to this, on June 11, 2025, Meta expanded AI video editing capabilities within , allowing users to apply preset prompts via to modify elements like outfits, backgrounds, lighting, or styles in uploaded videos before posting. These tools leverage generative AI to produce transformed outputs without requiring manual adjustments, facilitating quicker sharing of altered media. Users interact by selecting prompts, after which the AI processes and previews the edited video for approval. The features raise privacy considerations, as enabling suggestions grants Meta AI temporary access to device-stored media, including non-public photos, which are then analyzed on remote servers. Meta states that processed media is not retained post-suggestion generation unless users choose to share, but critics note the potential for in AI training pipelines. No equivalent built-in AI suggestions for text-based post editing, such as captions, have been officially rolled out on Facebook as of October 2025, though 's general prompting interface supports ad-hoc content generation upon user request.

Dating Features

Facebook Dating is a matchmaking service embedded within the primary Facebook mobile application, distinct from standalone dating apps. Announced by CEO at the F8 developer conference on May 1, 2018, it entered testing in select markets shortly thereafter and launched publicly in the United States on September 5, 2019, marking its expansion to the 20th country since initial rollout. The feature targets users seeking "meaningful relationships" by leveraging Facebook's existing on interests, groups, and , rather than relying solely on photo-based swiping mechanics common in competitors like . Users access via a dedicated tab in the app's menu, creating a separate profile that draws from but does not intersect with their main activity unless explicitly chosen. Core mechanics involve browsing suggested matches filtered by preferences such as age, location, and shared affiliations; sending "likes" to profiles; and initiating chats only after mutual reciprocation. Integration with Facebook Groups and allows matches based on common participation, while the "Secret Crush" option permits selecting up to nine existing friends or followers—if reciprocated, it reveals the mutual interest without prior notification to others. Additional tools include photo verification for authenticity and virtual date options via Messenger integration, though these have seen limited uptake. Privacy design separates from the core platform: activity remains invisible on users' timelines, friends are excluded from suggestions by default, and usage is opt-in for cross-profile sharing. Meta emphasizes these as core protections, built to address dating-specific vulnerabilities like unwanted visibility. Nonetheless, the feature inherits Facebook's broader practices, which have drawn scrutiny for inadequate safeguards; contemporaneous issues, including the scandal and exposed phone number databases, amplified distrust among users wary of profile being mined for advertising or third-party access. Independent reviews, such as those from the , critique persistent risks of fake accounts and scams, with user reports citing low rates and inactive profiles as evidence of poor moderation efficacy. Adoption metrics remain opaque, with no official user counts disclosed by Meta as of 2025; surveys of over 21,000 Americans in 2020 revealed mixed perceptions, including concerns over (cited by 40% of respondents) and perceived ineffectiveness for genuine connections. is restricted to users over 18 in supported regions, with algorithmic matching influenced by profile completeness and signals, though algorithmic opacity has fueled complaints of biased or stagnant pools.

Deprecated and Removed Features

FBML and Platform Apps

Facebook Markup Language (FBML) was a proprietary extension of introduced by in 2007 alongside the launch of the on May 24, 2007, enabling developers to create customized applications and content that integrated social features like user profiles, friends lists, and news feeds directly into third-party apps. FBML allowed apps to render Facebook-specific elements, such as <fb:profile-pic> for user images or <fb:wall> for posting to walls, without requiring full iframes, which simplified integration but restricted developers to Facebook's controlled environment. The facilitated the creation of third-party applications, with over 85 apps available at launch, many leveraging FBML to embed social context and interactivity within the ecosystem. Early platform apps used FBML to output markup that Facebook's servers processed and transformed into user-facing pages, supporting features like custom tabs on profiles and fan pages. This approach lowered barriers for developers by providing pre-built social widgets but limited flexibility compared to standard web technologies, as FBML tags were proprietary and required Facebook's rendering engine. In late 2010, Facebook began phasing out FBML for new page tabs, ceasing support for creating them via applications after December 2010 and encouraging migration to iframe-based apps for greater control and compatibility with web standards. Full followed: on January 1, 2012, FBML ceased to be supported on the platform, with no further bug fixes, and by June 1, 2012, FBML-based apps stopped functioning entirely. Developers were directed to adopt iframes, the SDK, and later Open Graph protocol for app integration, marking a shift toward more open, HTML5-compatible development that reduced reliance on Facebook's proprietary markup. This transition rendered legacy FBML-dependent platform apps obsolete, prompting widespread migrations or abandonments among early third-party developers.

Facebook Questions and Notes

Facebook Questions was a query-and-response tool launched on July 29, 2010, enabling users to pose questions to their networks or the broader community for crowdsourced answers. The feature supported keyword tagging to route inquiries to knowledgeable respondents and facilitated quick replies from friends or others on the platform. It integrated into status updates and feeds, aiming to enhance information sharing beyond simple posts. Facebook discontinued Questions for individual user access in late 2012, with the rollout of the shutdown announced on October 20, 2012, though it persisted in Groups and Pages for limited use. The phase-out reflected evolving priorities toward streamlined social interactions, as the feature saw limited adoption compared to core posting and commenting tools. Facebook Notes, introduced in 2006, functioned as an integrated blogging platform where users could compose extended entries with basic formatting, embed photos, and optionally import content from external blogs. It catered to longer-form expression unsuitable for standard status updates, appearing prominently on user profiles and feeds to encourage narrative sharing among connections. The company ended support for creating and editing Notes after October 31, 2020, while preserving existing published notes on profiles. This removal aligned with a platform shift favoring concise, visual, and algorithmic-driven content over dedicated long-form tools. Legacy notes remain accessible via profile archives but lack update capabilities, prompting users to export them manually for preservation.

Email and Lite Versions

Facebook introduced an email service in November 2010 as part of its overhaul of the Messages platform, allowing users to create @facebook.com email addresses for unified inbox functionality that combined social messages, , and traditional . The feature aimed to position as a primary communication hub, with users able to receive emails at [email protected] and forward them to external providers like , though adoption remained low due to user preference for established email services and concerns over . By February 2014, Meta retired the service, notifying users that incoming @facebook.com emails would forward to their primary email address until March 31, 2014, after which the addresses ceased functioning entirely; the decision stemmed from negligible usage, with fewer than 1% of users actively relying on it. In August 2009, Facebook launched a web-based "Lite" version accessible via lite.facebook.com, designed for users on slow or intermittent connections by minimizing page elements, reducing image loads, and stripping non-essential features like extensive photo viewing or complex profiles to improve load times on dial-up or low-bandwidth networks. This early iteration targeted regions with poor infrastructure, loading pages in under 10 seconds compared to the main site's longer times, but lacked full interactivity such as advanced search or access. The service was abruptly discontinued in April 2010 without public explanation from , redirecting all traffic to the standard site; analysts attributed the shutdown to insufficient user engagement and the company's shift toward mobile optimization over web lite alternatives. Subsequent Lite efforts, including the 2016 Android app, evolved separately but the original web version remains defunct, reflecting early experimentation with accessibility that did not scale.

Other Discontinued Tools

Facebook Gifts was a feature introduced in late 2012 that permitted users to purchase and send digital gift cards from partners such as and directly through the platform. It was discontinued on August 12, 2014, as Facebook redirected resources toward broader commerce integrations like its buy button. Nearby Friends, launched in 2014, allowed users to share real-time data with selected contacts to coordinate meetups, but raised privacy concerns over persistent tracking. The tool, along with related location services including Weather Alerts, Location History, and Background Location, was terminated on May 31, 2022, primarily due to low adoption rates and associated data management costs. M, an experimental personal assistant integrated into starting in 2015, combined with human operators to handle tasks like reservations and recommendations. It was phased out in January 2018 after concluded that insights from the project could enhance broader AI efforts without sustaining the hybrid model. , a standalone app released in 2014, offered a customized feed with articles, groups, and notifications in a magazine-style interface. Despite positive reviews for its design, it failed to gain significant user traction and was discontinued on July 29, 2016. Moments, unveiled in 2015, functioned as a private photo-sharing tool that leveraged facial recognition to organize and suggest shared albums from synced device libraries. The app was shut down on February 25, 2019, with users prompted to migrate content to other photo features. Facebook Analytics, a web-based for tracking app and page performance metrics, provided insights into user engagement and events for developers and businesses. It was deprecated on July 1, 2021, with Meta directing users to integrated tools in Business Suite and Ads Manager.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.