Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Facebook is launching 'Rooms' in select markets to offer public chat rooms in Messenger

Add as a preferred source on Google

These days, your news feed is getting a bit stale. Same people, same old arguments about the election, complaints about work on Mondays, and celebrations from last night’s big game.

Facebook knows this, so it has been experimenting with social expansion by kicking it back to the days of AIM chat rooms. Cue the nostalgia, as the company is rolling out a new feature called “Rooms” as part of Facebook Messenger — the addition is meant to encourage public conversations about topics and interests.

Recommended Videos

While this probably just means that digital mobs of people wielding pitchforks will expand outward into the public sphere, Facebook is only rolling the feature out in select markets. It had previously experimented with the feature using a standalone app called Rooms, but that failed to catch on. This Messenger addition utilizes learnings from the earlier experiment, TechCrunch reported.

Every “Room” can focus on specific topics and can include both people friends and strangers, offering a separation from group chats, which usually include family and friends exclusively.

The feature is launching first in Australia and Canada to serve as a test market before the U.S. and international users get to use Rooms. Users will be able to set their Rooms as private and accept new additions after administrator approval.

The use-cases for the feature are far-reaching, as TechCrunch pointed out.

“This could work well as an add-on for things like larger Facebook groups, where not all the members are also Facebook friends. (Or have even met in real life) … But it could also help connect people around subjects they want to discuss via messaging, instead of the more formal structure of a Facebook group.”

The Rooms feature could also come in handy for organizing events or sending out alerts, which certainly would have served political protesters well this past week in organizing post-election rallies across the country.

Harrison Kaminsky
Harrison’s obsession in the tech space originated in his father’s electronics store in Denville, New Jersey, where he…
Reddit may ask you to prove you’re human as it cracks down on bot accounts
Suspicious activity could trigger human verification
Reddit

Reddit is stepping up its fight against bots, and now your account could be asked to prove it is human if the platform detects fishy behaviour.

Reddit CEO Steve Huffman says these checks will be rare, but they are meant to protect what makes Reddit work in the first place – real people talking to real people.

Read more
You are about to see a flood of product recommendations on Instagram and Facebook
Meta’s new tools let creators plug products directly in content, with Amazon and Shopee leading the first wave of in-feed buying.
facebook

The line between content and commerce just got a lot harder to see, as your Instagram and Facebook feeds are about to shift in a noticeable way.

Meta is rolling out new affiliate tools that let creators tag items directly inside posts and Reels, which means more recommendations will show up right where you’re already scrolling.

Read more
Reddit wants to check if you’re using the iPhone’s Face ID camera
The company is considering new identity tools to tackle its growing bot problem
Reddit app on iPhone

Reddit may soon ask users to prove they’re human, and it might involve your face. During a TBPN podcast, Reddit's CEO, Steve Huffman, confirmed that the platform is exploring new identity verification methods, including using Face ID or Touch ID-style authentication, to tackle its growing bot problem.

https://twitter.com/alexisohanian/status/2035154057942245514?s=20

Read more