Facebook is following in the footsteps of messaging app Snapchat by testing a feature that allows users to schedule the automatic deletion of their posts.
The social network said the option, which offers expiration settings ranging
from one hour to seven days, was "a small pilot" for its iOS app.
Facebook often tests new capabilities.
It faced criticism in
June for one experiment that "manipulated" the content of nearly 700,000
users' news feeds, to gauge emotional responses.
The BBC understands that the expiration option was introduced after Facebook
users expressed an interest in automatically deleting posts which are only
relevant for a limited amount of time.
Posts for which an expiration time is chosen cannot be subsequently shared by
other users.
The option is currently limited to users in New Zealand, where Facebook and
other tech companies have tested products and services in the past.
Chasing Snapchat
Snapchat, the popular ephemeral messaging app that Facebook reportedly tried
to buy for $3bn (£1.8bn), has mushroomed in the three years since its founding
in 2011 - a growth rate that has sent its rivals clamouring for similar
success.
Time-limited messaging is increasingly popular among teenagers, the very
demographic coveted by many large tech firms.
In June, Facebook unveiled Slingshot, a photo-messaging app in which images
received from friends must be unlocked by "slinging" a different photo back to
the original sender.
All messages are deleted once sent and users can scribble or type over their
photos.
One month later, the Facebook-owned Instagram also revealed an app that
allows users to send photos which are deleted after being viewed by the
recipient.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-29156436
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