Skip to main content

Facebook will limit forwards on Messenger to tackle misinformation

Facebook says it’s imposing a new forward limit on its Messenger platform to stem the growing tide of viral misinformation ahead of the presidential election. The social network is now rolling an update that will restrict users from forwarding a message to no more than five people at a time, a significant downgrade from the service’s previous ability to forward messages to 150 chats.

Jay Sullivan, the executive responsible for Messenger’s privacy and safety, said in a blog post that the company is introducing a forwarding limit to “help curb the efforts of those looking to cause chaos, sow uncertainty or inadvertently undermine accurate information.”

“Limiting forwarding is an effective way to slow the spread of viral misinformation and harmful content that has the potential to cause real-world harm,” he added. Users who reach this threshold while forwarding a message will be shown a new alert on the Messenger app that reads: “Forwarding limit reached.”

Facebook Messenger forwarding limits
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The move comes months after Facebook rolled out a similar limitation for its other messaging app, WhatsApp. Earlier this year in April, WhatsApp added a new restriction for messages that have been already shared five times or over. This was on top of WhatsApp’s existing five-chats forward limit. The Facebook-owned messaging service claims these restrictions have led to a 25% decline in message forwards globally.

Alongside the new Messenger limit, Facebook today also announced it will stop accepting submissions for new political ads in the week preceding Election Day. “In the final days of an election, there may not be enough time to contest new claims. So in the week before the election, we won’t accept new political or issue ads,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote in a Facebook post.

In the run-up to the forthcoming presidential election, Facebook has rolled out measures to curb hate speech and misinformation. Last month, the social network launched its voter information hub which offers resources on a wide variety of election-related topics such as relevant links to register as a voter, requesting absentee or mail-in ballots, “well-sourced news,” and verified posts from state election officials and other nonpartisan civic organizations.

Shubham Agarwal
Shubham Agarwal is a freelance technology journalist from Ahmedabad, India. His work has previously appeared in Firstpost…
Elon Musk advises people to ditch Facebook and use Signal
elon musk stylized image

Tech CEO Elon Musk has urged his almost 42 million Twitter followers to use secure messaging app Signal instead of Facebook products. In a series of tweets, Musk shared a meme referencing Facebook's role in the spread of misinformation leading to the attack on Congress this week and suggested people should use the Signal app.

https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1347165127036977153

Read more
Facebook’s Messenger and WhatsApp saw record usage on New Year’s Eve
WhatsApp

With the ongoing pandemic making New Year’s Eve a little different from those that have gone before, it will surprise few that services such as Messenger and WhatsApp saw record usage throughout the day and evening.

“Despite so many being apart from friends and family due to the COVID-19 pandemic, people were still able to connect with each other the same way they’ve been connecting all year: through online video and audio calling, and in record numbers,” parent company Facebook said in a message posted on Sunday, January 3.

Read more
Nuro’s cute robot delivery pod takes important step forward in California
Nuro R2 autonomous car

R2 on the Road

Nuro has received the first-ever permit allowing it to commercially operate self-driving delivery vehicles in California.

Read more