Facebook has introduced Message Requests for Messenger, meant to allow people to connect with anyone via chat. Replacing the Other Folder of the Facebook inbox where messages sent by strangers were kept (and usually remained undiscovered), the new Message Requests feature works in a similar fashion, and allows users to accept or ignore new requests without the sender knowing that they read the message.
"The rule is pretty simple: If you're friends on Facebook, if you have each other's contact info in your phone and have these synced, or if you have an existing open thread, the new messages from that sender will be routed to your inbox. Everything else will now be a message request, minus spam attempts that we will continue to ruthlessly combat."
Facebook's Help Centre page explains how Message Requests works, noting that requests will appear at the top of the inbox when users receive a new one. "When you open a message request, you can choose Ignore to hide the conversation, or choose Reply to move the conversation to your inbox. Messages from friends will go to your inbox and messages we think are spam will be filtered out of your requests," adds the page.
With over 700 million active users, Messenger is already huge in terms of its user base and the company with its new Message Requests feature wants to make its standalone messaging app popular for connecting with non-friends.
Back in May, Facebook started rolling out a major feature to its standalone Messenger that offered publicly available contextual information of first-time senders on the app. The feature was immensely useful for Messenger app and its users who sometimes received messages from strangers.
The social platform has been aggressively pushing its Messenger and in July enabled users without an account to sign up for its Messenger app with just a phone number.
via gadgets 360
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