

But conversely, he says, “We need to make sure we don’t open up any new venues for bullying. There are a lot of legitimate use cases out there that we wanted to enable,” Facebook’s head of Messenger Stan Chudnovsky tells me in an exclusive interview.

and if you make a mistake you can correct it. “The pros are that users want to be in control. In the meantime, it’s also working on more unsend features, potentially including the ability to preemptively set an expiration date for specific messages or entire threads. A Facebook spokesperson tells me the plan is to roll it out globally as soon as possible, though that may be influenced by the holiday App Store update cut-off. The Remove feature rolls out in Poland, Bolivia, Colombia and Lithuania today on Messenger for iOS and Android.

And to prevent bullies from using the feature to cover their tracks, Facebook will retain unsent messages for a short period of time so if they’re reported, it can review them for policy violations. Formally known as “Remove for Everyone,” the button also leaves a “tombstone” indicating a message was retracted. Messages can only be unsent for the first 10 minutes after they’re delivered so that you can correct a mistake or remove something you accidentally pushed, but you won’t be able to edit ancient history. Now for the first time, Facebook Messenger users will get the power to unsend too so they can remove their sent messages from the recipient’s inbox. Facebook secretly retracted messages sent by CEO Mark Zuckerberg, TechCrunch reported seven months ago.
