Technology Today

Facebook has launched Messenger Kids in India with additional parental controls so that it can get more children under the age of 13 on to the platform.The messaging app, launched originally in December 2017, is now available across 75 countries worldwide.The social media platform, which has over 400 million users in India making it the second biggest customer base after the United States, hopes to expand its reach considerably into the younger segment of children.
The fact that this move comes barely a day after Facebook announced investments to the tune of Rs.43,574 crore in Reliance Jio platform isnt lost as the latter offers affordable mobile phone subscriptions to the young as well.In addition to India, the Messenger Kids is also available in neighboring Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan.
With the current update, Facebook has now provided parental controls to limit their childs access on Messenger kinds in spite of the fact that the core philosophy behind the app is to allow children to expand their networks.Supervised friendingThis is a new feature that replaces the current one where children cannot add any new contacts which is left to the parents prerogative.
Now, children can issue and accept contact invitations directly though once they perform these actions, a notification goes to the parent that allows them to override the childs decision.Parents would also get notified when the children join any groups though once approved they would be able to chat with each other individually and with adults moderating the group.Create easier connectionsThis feature allows parents to make the childs name and photo visible only to a select group of non-contacts.
Parents also have the option to make their childs name and profile photo visible to friends of their kids contacts and their parents or children of the parents Facebook friends.The approved adult listWith this feature, the parent can determine which adults can add their children into groups.
So, the focus would be allowing teachers to invite children to a virtual classroom or parents to invite other children into a workshop during the lockdown period.
The feature works with both curricular and non-curricular activities where the parents can determine the trustworthiness of the contacts.Facebook said that these changes were based on inputs received from parents across the world and that the company would be continuing their efforts to make the platform safe for children below 13.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Apple fans rushing for ₤ 35 iPhone 16 Pro Max as Sky uses payday deal


'I visited Chinese city which is like sci-fi movie with robots and noiseless trains'


Top Tech: Amazon's best early Prime Day deals including Ring, Tefal and Nespresso


Brits now 'obsessed' with health tracking and say it's key to motivation


Virgin Media is distributing complimentary wise TVs in surprise seven-day sale


O2 confirms UK network switch off and the exact date your phone might quit working


Samsung and Google have a new Android competitor that's like Nothing you've seen before


'Spectacular' Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra gets £10 a month price cut


Sky users given 48-hour cost alert and your costs could increase tomorrow


Never ever miss your favourite television series when on vacation with basic travel hack


Amazon may offer big reason to ditch your Fire TV Stick next week and try something new


Samsung and Google smartphone deals consist of free earbuds and smartwatches


Everyone using Google Chrome must restart their browser now - don't ignore new alert


iPhone users surprised after finding 'concealed' hack to organise home screen


Sky dishes out brand-new iPhone 16 at 'lowest ever' rate, not surprising that it's offering fast


Argos shoppers can get a free 40-inch Hisense TV by doing one thing


Immediate alert for everyone with a Gmail account - do not overlook 6 important brand-new rules


BBC iPlayer is rivalling Sky TV with a vital free upgrade - check your settings now