Facebook to add robots to messenger app to change way internet works

Facebook to add robots to messenger app to change way internet works
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Highlights

The robots won\'t just be limited to customer service conversations, and could also include tools like push notifications from businesses to tell people that products are back in stock, or from news organisations to tell people about breaking stories.

Facebook is going to add a whole host of robots to its Messenger app, in an attempt to change the way the internet works.

The company is widely expected to announce a "bot store" at its F8 event for developers. And it will hope that those bots could completely replace apps and websites for those companies that sign up for them.


The new tools for bots are expected to be just one part of the huge range of new Messenger features, which could also include "secret chats."

Some have already suggested that the bot store could be on the level of the app store in the degree to which it could change technology. Instead of clicking through to an app to look at products from a specific company, they will instead speak or type to the artificially intelligent chatbot, according to reports.

Bots will allow people to order products, or return them, by just talking to a robot. That automated customer service rep would be able to send back programmed replies taking people through the entire process of returning a product that they don't like, for instance.

The robots won't just be limited to customer service conversations, and could also include tools like push notifications from businesses to tell people that products are back in stock, or from news organisations to tell people about breaking stories.

But many businesses can't program such bots themselves, and so Facebook is expected to announce a special scheme that will let companies borrow Facebook's robot power for its own customer service purposes. It could also launch a platform that will allow companies that want chatbots to connect with those that build them, through Facebook.

Source: techgig.com

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