Facebook shows off new ways to chat, stream video

Inside the future of Facebook

SAN FRANCISCO --Looking for new ways to engage with its audience,Facebook says people who use its Messenger chat service will soon be able to order flowers, shop for shoes and talk with a variety of businesses by sending them direct text messages.

And soon, if you haven't "chatted" with those businesses on Messenger in a while, they'll be able to send you a paid message that offers a special deal or encourages you to buy a product you liked before.

And its ambitions go even further. "It [Facebook] probably wants to be seen as so much more than just a social network," CNET senior writer Ben Rubin told CBS News. "It's already the biggest social network out there, but it wants to dive into augmented and virtual reality, artificial intelligence, and also connecting roughly 4 billion people to the Internet that aren't already on it"

CEO Mark Zuckerberg used Facebook's annual software developers conference Tuesday to describe its latest initiatives at a time when some reports indicate people may be sharing less personal information on the social network - either because of privacy concerns or the growing appeal of competing apps.

Analysts say that underscores the importance for Facebook of adding more features to its growing chat services: It needs to keep people engaged -- and continue to learn about their interests for advertising purposes.

But Zuckerberg also reiterated Facebook's goals for connecting people around the world, adding a jab that seemed directed at the likes of Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump and others who have called for cracking down on immigration and rebuffing refugees.

Mark Zuckerberg on Donald Trump and Facebook's future

"As I look around the world, I'm starting to see people and nations turning inward," Zuckerberg said at one point during a keynote speech that mostly focused on new software initiatives. "I hear fearful voices calling for building walls and distancing people they label as 'others.' I hear them calling for blocking free expression, for slowing immigration, for reducing trade, and in some cases even for cutting access to the Internet."

Zuckerberg went on to say he prefers optimism over fear and believes technology should be used "to build bridges" instead of walls. The billionaire tech mogul has previously backed efforts to ease U.S. immigration restrictions and provide more Internet access in developing countries.

Most of Zuckerberg's talk, meanwhile, was focused on new ways that people can use chat services, live video and even virtual reality technology to communicate.

With its new emphasis on chatting with businesses, Facebook is joining several tech companies working to promote the use of intelligent software programs known as "chatbots," which let businesses interact with customers in conversational language. Microsoft recently announced a similar effort with its Skype service, but Facebook appears further along.

These bots particularly stood out to Rubin. He said that this idea of using "very simple lines of code" to give users a direct through-line to businesses could have a big impact on the way we receive goods and services.

"Say I put in an order for Taco Bell -- I message Taco Bell, then tell them what I want, and then it would be ready for when I actually get there," Rubin explained.

Facebook already has more than 30 companies signed up to deploy chatbots on Messenger, including major corporations like CNN, eBay, Burger King and Bank of America. Facebook is also releasing programming tools that other companies can use to build their own chatbots for Messenger.

"We think you should just be able to message a business the same way that you message a friend," Zuckerberg said, noting many people hate the experience of calling businesses on the phone.

Facebook is also making it easier for individuals to contact businesses by searching for their bots within Messenger or clicking on an ad in Facebook's regular news stream. But Vice President David Marcus said the company wants to be careful not to annoy users by filling the Messenger app with unsolicited spam.

Facebook is testing a program that charges businesses for the opportunity to send a "sponsored message," but they'll only be able to contact people who are existing customers or have already messaged the business, Marcus said. Individuals on Messenger will be able to block future messages from a business at any time.

That's consistent with the conservative approach Facebook has used to gradually introduce paid video ads on its main platform and commercials on its Instagram photo-sharing service. The company doesn't want to risk driving people away with too many annoying ads, Marcus said.

"It's a very high-quality, personal environment," he said in an interview. "We want to keep it that way."

Facebook users don't post as much personal information anymore

The effort comes as more people are embracing the Internet chat service and its competitors. Messenger now has 900 million active users worldwide, while WhatsApp, another chat service owned by Facebook, claims 1 billion.

A way to engage with businesses through direct messaging could be a way to capitalize on the popularity of other social apps out there.

"More and more of our mobile time is spent within messaging," said Ken Sena, an investment analyst at Evercore ISI, who examined the apps in a recent report. He's one of several analysts who say they believe consumers would prefer talking to a business within the messaging app they're already using, rather than download a separate app and create another user name and password for each business.

That's already a popular model in some Asian countries, where people use China's WeChat, Japan's Line and other texting services to schedule doctor's appointments, pay for meals, order merchandise or send gifts to their friends.

Facebook Inc. is also releasing a host of other tools for developers to build apps that work with its services, including software for streaming video from drones and other gadgets. The new video push is part of Facebook's effort to compete against Twitter, SnapChat, YouTube and other rivals that are also vying to serve video-hungry viewers.

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