Poke
for mobile: Facebook's new app. The app sends messages, photos, and
videos that expire seconds after they're sent. Perfect for the type of
communication you don't want falling into the wrong hands.
Cue the inappropriate poke jokes. Facebook just released a Poke for mobile app that lets people send messages, photos, and videos that expire seconds after they're sent.
The news confirms a report by All Things earlier this month.
This standalone app, similar to the app Snap chat, is perfect for sending messages and images you don't want unintended recipients to stumble across. Facebook calls this sending things in a "lightweight way." The rest of the world calls it sexting.
"With the Poke app, you can poke or send a message, photo, or video to Facebook friends to share what you're up to in a lightweight way. You can poke an individual friend or several at once," reads a Facebook blog post.
Facebook isn't that naive. It's built in reporting tools to make sure things don't get too out of control for recipients. After all, sharing photos "of a sexual nature," is a violation of Facebook's policies.
"If you ever see something you're uncomfortable with, you can click the gear menu and report it," the post reads.
You set each message to expire at either 1, 3, 5, or 10 seconds. When time runs out, the message disappears from the app. But remember, that's not going to stop a friend from taking a screenshot of a message, as CNET's Casey Newton pointed out.
Facebook introduced the poke feature in 2004, but the desktop version does only one thing: instantly notifies friends that they've been "poked."
The poke is a leftover from Facebook's dorm room days. The new mobile Poke takes the sexual innuendo to another level and may get Facebook more mobile traffic, if sexting app Snapchat's performance is any indication. Snap chat said its users send 20 million "Snaps" per day.
Cue the inappropriate poke jokes. Facebook just released a Poke for mobile app that lets people send messages, photos, and videos that expire seconds after they're sent.
The news confirms a report by All Things earlier this month.
This standalone app, similar to the app Snap chat, is perfect for sending messages and images you don't want unintended recipients to stumble across. Facebook calls this sending things in a "lightweight way." The rest of the world calls it sexting.
"With the Poke app, you can poke or send a message, photo, or video to Facebook friends to share what you're up to in a lightweight way. You can poke an individual friend or several at once," reads a Facebook blog post.
Facebook isn't that naive. It's built in reporting tools to make sure things don't get too out of control for recipients. After all, sharing photos "of a sexual nature," is a violation of Facebook's policies.
"If you ever see something you're uncomfortable with, you can click the gear menu and report it," the post reads.
You set each message to expire at either 1, 3, 5, or 10 seconds. When time runs out, the message disappears from the app. But remember, that's not going to stop a friend from taking a screenshot of a message, as CNET's Casey Newton pointed out.
Facebook introduced the poke feature in 2004, but the desktop version does only one thing: instantly notifies friends that they've been "poked."
The poke is a leftover from Facebook's dorm room days. The new mobile Poke takes the sexual innuendo to another level and may get Facebook more mobile traffic, if sexting app Snapchat's performance is any indication. Snap chat said its users send 20 million "Snaps" per day.
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