S . fransisco: Facebook confirmed on Friday it had been dabbling with charging members around $100 to have messages for the inboxes of strangers for instance social media co-founder and chief Mark Zuckerberg.
"We are testing some extreme prices to determine what functions filter spam," Facebook said in reaction with an AFP inquiry with regards to the costly delivery fees.
In December, Facebook began testing the feasibility of charging to assure that messages from strangers pass into inboxes of intended recipients.
At its launch, the Facebook Messages test, limited by the United States, let a sender pay some money to make sure a digital missive is routed to someone's "inbox" even though the individual is just not in their circle of friends.
"We are testing some extreme prices to determine what functions filter spam," Facebook said in reaction with an AFP inquiry with regards to the costly delivery fees.
In December, Facebook began testing the feasibility of charging to assure that messages from strangers pass into inboxes of intended recipients.
At its launch, the Facebook Messages test, limited by the United States, let a sender pay some money to make sure a digital missive is routed to someone's "inbox" even though the individual is just not in their circle of friends.