Messenger Rooms: Facebook’s new video calls let 50 people drop in
Facebook has added a wave of new video-calling features to WhatsApp, Messenger and its main app, following increased demand for social video calling.
New Messenger Rooms will let people start group video chats that can be joined by up to 50 people.
The company told the BBC it released the features earlier than planned due to the coronavirus lockdown.
Facebook said it had worked with cryptographers to prevent unwanted guests from dropping into chats.
While the new features will launch for some users in the UK on Friday, it will take several weeks for the update to reach all Facebook members.
Video-calling services have seen a sharp rise in use during the coronavirus pandemic. Facebook said video-calling on Messenger had doubled since last year, in areas most affected by coronavirus.
Rival app Zoom saw daily active users grow to 300 million in April. And Houseparty, owned by Fortnite-maker Epic Games, was downloaded more than two million times at the beginning of March, as the first major US cities issued stay-at-home orders.
Some apps, such as Microsoft Teams, have offered premium features for free during the pandemic.
Facebook's new Messenger Rooms feature was introduced in a blog post by chief executive Mark Zuckerberg, a move usually reserved for its biggest product launches.
Like Houseparty, Messenger Rooms will let people drop in and out of group video chats while the "room" is open.
John Hegeman, vice president of news feed for Facebook, said the company wanted to recreate the "serendipity" that happens in the physical world, something he claimed video-conferencing competitors did not do.
"In the physical world, you have the ability to bump into people... so, we're hopeful that some of that serendipity will be able to occur in this product," Mr Hegeman said.
Rooms can be created via Facebook or Messenger, and the company said it planned to add the feature to Instagram, WhatsApp, and its Portal video-calling devices "soon".
People creating a Messenger Room will be able to keep their room private, block unwanted participants and send invitations to people who are not on Facebook.
Participants will be able to use augmented reality filters and change their background in real-time.
Publicly discoverable rooms will be listed at the top of the Facebook news feed.
The service was tested in Argentina and Poland, where Facebook Messenger is heavily used. During testing, rooms could support 17 to 20 participants at a time, but Facebook said that number would grow to 50 over the coming weeks.
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