A leaked document revealed Facebook’s plan to start monetizing on of its fastest-growing and most popular product, the Messenger. The document stated that in the second quarter this year, a new feature would be launched, allowing businesses to send advertisement chats via Messenger.
Breaking News
- Children's Book Author Faces New Charges After Trying to Poison Husband With Sandwich Before Killing Him for Insurance
- VP Kamala Harris Urges US Agencies To Stop Telling People That AI Tools Aren't Dangerous for People's Safety, Rights
- Biden Administration Revives Threatened Species Protection Rules, Undoing Trump Rollbacks
Skype aims to help users be more productive with the two new features for Skype for Android. With these new features, users can easily schedule calls and open Office files. Microsoft has been improving their apps, including its popular Skype to perform better in various platforms.
California, US-based social network giant Facebook announced that it will pull Messenger from its mobile app to boost the usage of the standalone Messenger, starting with European users before rolling out the change worldwide.
Subscribe to VCpost newsletter
Most Popular
- Former CEO Shoots Himself to Commit Suicide After Receiving $25 Million Record-Breaking Fine for Fraud at Steinhoff
- Xi Jinping Warns Dutch PM That 'No Force' Can Stop China's Technological Advancement Amid Export Restrictions
- Disney Investor Nelson Peltz Criticizes the Company’s 'Woke' Strategy, Questioning 'Black Panther' and 'The Marvels' Films
- Major AI Companies Unite to Create the World's First Artificial Superintelligence Alliance Worth $7.6 Billion
- Social Security Benefits to Increase for Some Seniors After Addressing Overpayment Issues
- Businessman Brutally Murdered Allegedly by 4 of His Workers Who Swung an Axe Into His Head
- North Korea Refuses Peace Talk With Japan Unless They Confront Their 'Brutal' History; Business Relations at Risk
- Hunter Biden Asks Court to Junk $1.4 Million Tax Evasion Case as Politically Motivated, But Judge Appears Skeptical