Facebook testing

Facebook is currently testing the addition of a SnapShat feature to its instant messaging application, Messenger, to join the new feature of the Snabhat feature that has been stolen from SnapSat and added to all its services.
After the new feature of many Messenger users emerged yesterday, Facebook, which has the largest social networking network in the world with more than 2.07 billion active users per month, has tested the feature of Mashable on technology news.
The new feature, which drives users to "maintain their own beam and impact" when messaging with friends, is similar to Snape Chat, so it also uses emoticons and a meter that has been showing since when and how it is going.
The "Stark" or "Streak" feature pays for addiction while encouraging friends to constantly exchange messages for consecutive days. The user has an emoji next to the user name for a certain period, and the user must reconnect with that friend before the "effect" disappears.
A Facebook spokesman confirmed the feature test for Mashable, saying it was a way to "see at a glance interesting facts about the people you correspond with." "For example, a lightning bolt may appear next to the name of the person you sent a message to for at least three days, and the meter will indicate the number of consecutive days that you have chatted."
"Impact" has long been an important part of Snape for many users, especially teenagers who are often keen to keep their "impact" for hundreds of days at a time. Then it's part of why Snape users spend more time with the app.
Source: Arab Technology News

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