Skip to main content

Facebook updates Messenger app, shows when a friend has read your message

Facebook Messenger Read Receipts
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Eventually headed to Facebook’s mobile applications as well as the mobile Web interface, Facebook has launched a series of updates to the standalone Facebook Messenger application available for iOS and Android devices. As mentioned by Techcrunch, the most notable addition included in today’s update is the ability to view which friends have viewed a message and the exact time the message was viewed. This feature also works with the group chat function, particularly helpful when trying to meet up at a specific location. In addition to the “read receipt” feature, Facebook has also included the name of the town or city where the message originates as well as a small Google Maps graphic to visually specify the location.

Similar to RIM’s BlackBerry Messenger application, it’s impossible to turn off the “read receipt” feature that allows a user to see when a friend reads the message. However, users can choose not to share location and avoid attaching a GPS map coordinate with each message.

The mapping function would be most useful when attempting to visit a Facebook friend, thus allowing the friend to see exactly where the user is located in order to provide accurate directions. Prior to this update, Facebook included a separate link that had to be clicked in order to view a friend’s location.

One other minor alteration to the updated Facebook Messenger application includes the display of a friend’s name in the chat window when they are typing a message. Prior to this change, the user would only see an ellipsis when a user was typing. Beyond the updates to the Facebook Messenger application for iOS and Android, Facebook is also planning to release the update for BlackBerry, but didn’t mention a time frame on that launch. Leaked screenshots of a future update to the Facebook Messenger application suggest that Facebook will be adding video chat capabilities in the form of Skype integration.

Editors' Recommendations

Mike Flacy
By day, I'm the content and social media manager for High-Def Digest, Steve's Digicams and The CheckOut on Ben's Bargains…
Our 5 favorite iPhone and Android apps by Black developers
An iPhone with apps from Black developers downloaded on it.

As we wrap up the celebration of 2023's Black History Month, it remains important to recognize and appreciate the contributions that Black people have made in various fields, including technology and the smartphone apps we use every day. From social media platforms to productivity tools, Black developers and other people of color have worked hard to create innovative, useful, and just plain fun apps.

Here, we're focusing on five helpful apps developed by Black people that you should check out. These iPhone and Android apps range from ones that help you discover and support Black-owned businesses to ones that provide legal assistance in case of an emergency to ones that curate and highlight sources of news and entertainment by Black creators.
We Read Too

Read more
Sunbird looks like the iMessage for Android app you’ve been waiting for
Sunbird Android app screenshots.

The idea of iMessage for Android sounds like a pipe dream, and for the most part, it is. Apps like AirMessage and Bleeper do make it possible to get iMessage on your Android phone today, but they often require complicated networking and Wi-Fi port forwarding, plus a Mac or iPhone to run in the background 24/7.

These apps technically work, but they're not things the average user can comfortably and confidently rely on. A new app — called Sunbird — now promises to change that.
iMessage on Android, now simplified

Read more
These 80+ apps could be running adware on your iPhone or Android device
Illustration of an infected iPhone

Cybersecurity company Human has uncovered another adware campaign engaging in ad fraud that is targeting iOS and Android devices. In the simplest terms, ad fraud allows a bad actor to either visibly spam an app with ads, or to manipulate the code in such a way that the ads are invisible to the user while the bad actor extracts advertising money from a marketer.

In each iteration, it’s fraudulent. Ad fraud has been widespread in the industry for a while, and the latest investigation uncovered a cache of over 75 Android apps listed in the Google Play Store and nearly a dozen apps on Apple’s App Store that are engaged in various forms of ad fraud.

Read more