Home > Media News > Facebook Messenger Undergoes Major Changes with the Removal of Discover Tab

Facebook Messenger Undergoes Major Changes with the Removal of Discover Tab
29 Feb, 2020 / 12:21 pm / OMNES

846 Views

Facebook Messenger is getting a new look with a simpler version as it removes the Discover tab, which was an attempt from the social network to inject its chatbot platform into its private messaging app. The change will begin to happen next week as reported by TechCrunch.

Following an extensive Messenger redesign announced last year, Facebook pledged to make the app simpler and less cluttered after years of bloat, a direct result of the do everything design. Messenger followed under chief David Marcus. Marcus is now in charge of Facebook’s blockchain division, which oversees the company’s Libra cryptocurrency.

Now, under the leadership of former head of product and Messenger VP Stan Chudnovsky, the app has been streamlined and brought back in line with its core role as a functional messaging app. Part of that process has meant removing all the business-focused elements of the app that weren’t serving users and were instead only there to help promote Messenger as some kind of text-based customer service hub.

The Discover tab, the one on the far right in the pre-redesign image, used to be where you’d find business accounts, some of which were operated by artificial intelligence bots to use the AI tech to try and revolutionize customer service.

You could also find Facebook Instant Games, the company’s attempt to revive its once flourishing web-based gaming platform in a mobile setting. Instant Games still exist on the web, but they’re being removed alongside Discover in this new Messenger update. The games can’t be accessed from the main Facebook app, either.

In the new design, Facebook is promoting a “People” section where you can see large squares dedicated to friends who have recently updated their Facebook Stories, as well as a contact list organized to promote your most used contacts who are actively online. It’s much cleaner and should go a long way in making Messenger easier to navigate when you’re not flooded by peripheral features and attempts to grab your attention.