Facebook’s messaging service has now been shifted to a dedicated application. Nitin Sreedhar looks at why this move has got mixed reactions from users.
Facebook’s messaging service has now been phased out from its main app to a stand-alone app -- Facebook Messenger.
Users will now have to install a separate application on their smartphones and other devices to view and reply to messages from their friends.
You can still log on to Facebook through a computer and chat with your friends, but this recent shift to the messenger has received a lot of poor reviews.
Privacy concerns?
First things first, Facebook Messenger is not a new entity. It was launched back in August 2011 and until now users could opt to install the app or access their chat through the main Facebook app.
It was only in April that the social networking giant announced the move to a separate app.
Now to the ‘privacy issues’: When users (Android) are about to install the app from the Play Store, they are prompted with the Android app permissions.
Some of them include finding accounts on your device, reading your contact card and call log, editing, reading and receiving your SMSes, using your microphone, accessing your storage and so on.
In the iOS version of the messenger, the app asks for permissions only when a feature is used for the first time.
These vast numbers of permissions needed on the Android app have received a lot of flak -- users and critics alike.
Some users have questioned the need for the app to access their contacts list.
Another feature that has provoked the ire of users is the ‘location’ option -- new messages show your location by default.
Damandeep Soni, business development head for Line in India, says that user privacy is of utmost importance.
“In most instant messaging apps, a person can add another user without his or her consent.
The first important level of privacy is that both the parties should be willing to communicate.
The second level is data privacy.
If two users are talking, then it is important to ensure that a third party is not intruding and listening to their conversation.
It ultimately comes down to your data policy.”
Soni also believes that the importance given to ‘privacy’ varies in every app.
“The instant messaging category is huge. Every application has a stance since they all provide different features.
Messaging is also rapidly emerging as a content platform. The mobile phone was essentially invented to communicate.
"But people are building more services on top of that now.”
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