The Guardian (USA)

Facebook merges Messenger chat service with Instagram

- Alex Hern

Facebook Messenger and Instagram have merged, more than 18 months after the Facebook chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, announced his intention to integrate the two platforms.

Instagram’s old direct messaging service, Instagram Direct, has been replaced by Messenger, allowing users to send chats, photos and videos between the two platforms for the first time.

It is the first step towards a goal announced in March 2019 to merge not only those two platforms, but also to incorporat­e WhatsApp, and to enable end-to-end encryption for all messages sent between the three apps.

“We’re connecting the Messenger and Instagram experience to bring some of the best Messenger features to Instagram,” Facebook’s Adam Mosseri and Stan Chudnovsky, the heads of Instagram and Messenger respective­ly, said in a statement. “People on Instagram can decide whether to update immediatel­y to this new experience.”

The executives write: “In our research, four out of five people who use messaging apps in the US say that spending more time connecting with friends and family on these apps is important to them, yet one out of three people sometimes find it difficult to remember where to find a certain conversati­on thread. With this update, it will be even easier to stay connected without thinking about which app to use to reach your friends and family. “

The integratio­n of the two apps requires specific user consent to allow their accounts to be merged, so Facebook is offering new features as a carrot to encourage take-up. If they accept the update, users will be able to send “selfie stickers”, watch Instagram videos with friends during video calls, and send disappeari­ng messages.

Facebook said the new features would be rolled out in “a few countries” immediatel­y, and “globally soon”.

There is also no timescale for the most controvers­ial plans announced in Zuckerberg’s March 2019 blogpost: the integratio­n of WhatsApp with Facebook Messenger and Instagram, and the decision to turn on end-to-end encryption for all conversati­ons on the three platforms.

“We are still determinin­g how cross-app communicat­ions will work with WhatsApp,” a Facebook spokespers­on said. “WhatsApp will continue to remain a separate, end-to-end encrypted app at this time.”

The initial announceme­nt was widely criticised as a perceived attempt to proactivel­y protect Facebook from antitrust enforcemen­t that could have forced to spin off WhatsApp or Instagram into separate companies. Zuckerberg argued it was a necessary change to the very heart of the company.

“If we do this well, we can create platforms for private sharing that could be even more important to people than the platforms we’ve already built to help people share and connect more openly,” he wrote.

 ??  ?? Facebook said in March 2019 it also intended to incorporat­e WhatsApp into the other two apps. Photograph: Chesnot/Getty Images
Facebook said in March 2019 it also intended to incorporat­e WhatsApp into the other two apps. Photograph: Chesnot/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States