Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Computing
  4. Mobile
  5. Social Media
  6. News

11,000 bots now live on Facebook Messenger after just three months

Add as a preferred source on Google

There are now 11,000 bots on Facebook Messenger, just three months after the platform was announced. This means the nearly one billion users of that chat platform have plenty of scripts to talk to, assuming they’re already sick of chatting with each other.

Developers, always hungry for more attention from Facebook’s dedicated user base, have been quick to jump onto the Messenger bot bandwagon. There are bots you can ask about the weather or about today’s headlines, and bots that you can actually buy things from. But The Verge, and other sites, are asking a question: Is anyone actually chatting with these things?

Recommended Videos

Facebook, in part to answer these challenges, pointed out a few success stories. The Disney film Zootopia, for example, launched a bot that allowed users to chat with protagonist Judy Hopps. Millions of messages were sent, and the average user spent several minutes in conversation with the computer-animated rabbit.

The NBA’s official bot, which shows highlights on demand when users ask for them, also drove quite a bit of engagement, according to Facebook. There were over 350,000 interactions during the NBA finals and draft. Those numbers are nothing compared to the number of Tweets and Facebook posts sent during those same events, but it’s a fascinating test case nonetheless.

Messenger’s bot platform is just three months old, and it’s likely that the killer use case for this technology hasn’t been invented yet. Maybe there is a use case for IM bots that is so mind-bogglingly useful that it will cause users everywhere to start chatting with them regularly.

And certainly brands could benefit by jumping into spaces previously occupied by chat between friends and family. The timeline has already been invaded with quite a bit of success, so why not colonize the chat space?

But to do that, bots are going to have to be really, really compelling. Asking a bot about the weather needs to be easier than opening up your weather app, and asking about the news needs to work consistently enough that people bother to chat instead of search. It will be interesting to see what sort of solutions developers come up with.

Justin Pot
Justin's always had a passion for trying out new software, asking questions, and explaining things – tech journalism is the…
Apple says Lockdown Mode thwarted spyware attacks with a clean slate
Apple’s strongest defense is actually holding up
Lockdown Mode information page on an iPhone 14 Pro.

Apple says it has not seen a successful spyware attack on any iPhone with Lockdown Mode enabled, a claim it shared with TechCrunch.

Lockdown Mode arrived in 2022 as an opt-in feature for iPhone, iPad, and Mac. It was introduced as a stricter security mode for people at high risk of targeted attacks, such as journalists, activists, and government officials.

Read more
The Dynamic Island could shrink on the iPhone 18 series, and not just on the Pro models
One leaker, one claim, and a big question: is Apple genuinely ready to give every iPhone buyer the same design treatment as Pro owners this cycle?
Apple iPhone 17 Pro in Cosmic Orange leaning on a gray wall.

Apple’s Dynamic Island has been around long enough that most people have made their peace with it or forgotten it’s there. In fact, I’ve seen people associating the pill-shaped notch with newer iPhone models (released in the last 3 years). Now, a fresh leak suggests that the notch replacement is about to shrink, not just on the expensive models. 

What did the leaker actually say?

Read more
Apple Podcasts finally gets serious about video, adds multiple YouTube-inspired features
With offline downloads, Picture-in-Picture, and a dedicated video hub, iOS 26.4 turns Apple Podcasts into a platform creators can no longer afford to ignore.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

For years, the Apple Podcasts app supported video, at least it did technically, but nobody used it. Creators ignored it, while listeners forgot it. Meanwhile, other platforms like YouTube and Spotify quietly built empires on video podcasting. However, that changes with the iOS 26.4 update, or at least that is what Apple hopes for. 

Video podcasting exploded in popularity in recent years, with audiences gravitating toward platforms that treated the format well (as already mentioned above). Despite being an iPhone user, I personally consume podcasts on YouTube (I briefly paid for the Premium membership as well). 

Read more