
Sometimes you need to message a non-friend, and today Facebook starts testing
if it can make a little money and cut spam by asking you to pay to
ensure the recipient sees that message. Facebook’s also changing
everyone’s privacy settings into dynamic filters that let “relevant”
messages through. These moves address Facebook’s old settings that
caused important messages to sometimes go unseen.
Previously, Facebook’s messaging privacy settings were cut and dry.
You set your inbox to allow messages from everyone, friends of friends,
or friends only. Any sender that didn’t qualify had their messages
dumped in the “Other Inbox”, a little known sub-tab of the Inbox that
most people rarely checked if ever. I had a friend who actually got a
Facebook Message from a long-lost brother from the other side of the
world but didn’t see it for six months because he wasn’t a friend of a
friend.
Facebook’s trying to rectify this situation, and also make room for
the new revenue stream it’s testing by replacing these hard settings
with more flexible filters. Facebook is legally allowed to make this
change to privacy settings because of the new language about messaging it put into its terms of service this month.
If you were set to accept messages from friends of friends or
everyone, you’ll now have the “Basic Filtering” which means you’ll
mostly see messages from friends and people you may know in you main
Inbox. If you had restricted your Inbox to friends only, you’ll be
switched onto the “Strict Filtering” which means you’ll mostly see
messages from friends.
You’ll notice the word “mostly” in there. That gives Facebook the
freedom to deliver messages to your main Inbox even if they’re from
outside your preferred categories of senders if it thinks they’re highly
relevant. For example, if you have the Strict Filtering setting and are
in a group message thread with three friends and one non-friend,
Facebook might allow that non-friend to reach your main Inbox because
there’s a high likelihood you want to see their message.
The new filters help out with the new version of Facebook Messenger For Android
that allows signups from people without Facebook accounts. If a
non-Facebook user that has your phone number in their address book tries
to message you, Facebook might let that through.

These filters also pave the way for Facebook’s new paid messaging
system that it begins testing today with a very small percentage of
users in the United States. The idea is that by letting people pay $1 or
some other small fee, Facebook knows a message is important to the
sender. The price also theoretically deters spam because conversion
rates on spam messages are so low that having to pay to deliver them
makes it very tough to earn money. Facebook is also capping the number
of paid messages you can receive per week at one for now to reduce the
potential for abuse.
Facebook explains that “Several commentators and researchers have
noted that imposing a financial cost on the sender may be the most
effective way to discourage unwanted messages and facilitate delivery of
messages that are relevant and useful.” Considering the frequency cap,
and fact that most people won’t need this at all or very often, it’s
unlikely to turn into a major revenue stream for Facebook if it’s ever
rolled out to everyone.

So what do the new privacy settings and paid messages (if rolled out)
really mean for users? Above you see the message Facebook is showing
users. Most people will hardly notice the difference. Thanks to the
dynamic filtering, you might see more important messages that would have
been relegated to the Other Inbox
If you previously allowed Messages from everyone you might see a
little less spam. The extra economic signal means Facebook can be
stricter in classifying messages as spam and simply refuse to deliver
them entirely.
Finally, if you’re somewhat of a public figure, a beautiful woman, or
otherwise get a lot of unwanted messages, you can now be more confident
about using a more defensive privacy setting like Strict Filtering
without worry you’ll miss messages about people you care about. Random
strangers won’t be able to get through. Meanwhile, someone who’s friends
with many of your friends, was tagged in photos with you, or that
Facebook somehow thinks you’ll want to hear from will be able to pass
through the filter. And if they want to make sure you see the message,
they could pay the fee.
Some users will surely be annoyed by both changes. Most people don’t
want Facebook meddling with their privacy settings without express
consent. Others will likely be angry that anyone with some money to
spare can pester them with Messages.
In the end, these settings might actually help people but we’ll have
to wait and see what their impact is, and whether users are able to
understand their value through their fears about Facebook exploiting
them for dollars. But if I had to comment on the announcement of the
paid messaging test, I’d say Facebook didn’t do a clear enough job
explaining that this is to deter spammers who are way too stingy to pay
for a Facebook message when they could email you for free.
Credit : Tech Crunch
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