Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Facebook Brings Messenger Kids To Canada, Peru

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2018 05:02 PM
    Despite call for withdrawal by experts, Facebook has decided to expand the reach of Messenger Kids by introducing the video calling and messaging app designed for children under 13 to families in Canada and Peru.
     
     
    The Messenger Kids app was launched in the US last year. 
     
     
    Facebook on Friday said it will also introduce Spanish and French versions of the app to all three countries where the app is available.
     
     
    Earlier this year, more than 100 child health experts wrote an open letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, urging him to discontinue the app.
     
     
    "At a time when there is mounting concern about how social media use affects adolescents' well being, it is particularly irresponsible to encourage children as young as pre-schoolers to start using a Facebook product," the authors wrote.
     
     
    But instead of heeding to their advice, Faceboook has now introduced the app in two other countries, while adding that it wants to promote "responsible use" of Messenger Kids.
     
     
    It also created new features rooted in "principles of social and emotional learning" including "Kindness Stickers", a new set of photo stickers designed to inspire kindness towards others and "Messenger Kids Pledge", a pledge of guiding principles between parents and kids that encourage the responsible use of the app.
     
     
    The points of the pledge are -- "Be Kind", "Be Respectful", "Be Safe", and "Have Fun".
     
     
    Facebook said it was working in collaboration with researchers from the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence and a global group of advisors to develop "Appreciation Mission", an interactive guide within the app that will encourage kids to discover and express appreciation for their friends and family. 
     
     
    "This is part of the 'Missions' section of the app where kids learn how to use certain features like starting a video call and sending a photo," Loren Cheng, Facebook's Product Management Director and Tarunya Govindarajan, Product Manager at the social networking site, said in a statement. 
     
     
    "In addition to these features, we'll continue to improve other parts of the app and controls based on parent and expert feedback.
     
     
    "For example, one thing we heard consistently is that parents want more than one parent to have control over kid accounts, so starting today we're making it possible for two parents to manage accounts," Cheng and Govindarajan wrote.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Italian Court Finds Link Between Cellphone Use And Tumour

    Italian Court Finds Link Between Cellphone Use And Tumour
    MILAN — A longtime Telecom Italia employee has been awarded monthly social security payments after a court found that his brain tumour was caused by improper use of a company-issued cellphone.

    Italian Court Finds Link Between Cellphone Use And Tumour

    Facebook Is for 'Everyone', Says CEO Zuckerberg in Jab at Snapchat

    Facebook does innovation to serve "everyone" in the community and not just the "high end", its CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said in an apparent swipe at Snapchat boss' reported "poor countries" remark that triggered a controversy in India.

    Facebook Is for 'Everyone', Says CEO Zuckerberg in Jab at Snapchat

    Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel Faces The Heat After 'Poor India' Remark: Everything you need to know

    Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel Faces The Heat After 'Poor India' Remark: Everything you need to know
    Some users wrote, "Poor India & Spain need better than Snapchat", "Good bye, My Snapchat Account and Snap Inc. You'll be product of gone by era and derision", and "Poor Evan Spiegel". 

    Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel Faces The Heat After 'Poor India' Remark: Everything you need to know

    This New Camera May Capture Distant Images Without Long Lens

    This New Camera May Capture Distant Images Without Long Lens
    Scientists, including one of Indian origin, have developed a unique camera that can capture detailed images of distant objects without using a long lens, an advance that could lead to telescopes that are less bulky.

    This New Camera May Capture Distant Images Without Long Lens

    Facebook Tool Created By B.C. Teen To Plan Homework Gains Popularity Overseas

    Facebook Tool Created By B.C. Teen To Plan Homework Gains Popularity Overseas
    Alec Jones, 14, says his chatbot, Christopher Bot, that helps students stay on top of their homework has garnered more than 3,000 subscribers, with many of them based in Thailand.

    Facebook Tool Created By B.C. Teen To Plan Homework Gains Popularity Overseas

    Iconic Nokia 3310 Makes A Comeback: Here Are Its Features

    Iconic Nokia 3310 Makes A Comeback: Here Are Its Features
    Nokia 3310, known for its robustness, was the most widely used feature phone globally in 2000-05. It is estimated to have sold 126 million units globally when there were only a few countries with mobile networks.

    Iconic Nokia 3310 Makes A Comeback: Here Are Its Features