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Facebook is hiding messages letting people know their friends have died

Apr 7, 2016, 18:45 IST

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Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks during the 2013 TechCrunch Disrupt conference on September 11, 2013 in San Francisco, California. The TechCruch Disrupt Conference runs through September 11.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Facebook has a hidden message folder where it filters messages it thinks you don't want to see - sometimes with serious and unintended consequences.

Users are complaining about not seeing messages from since-deceased family members, people reaching out to help them, and even people contacting them to let them know their friends have died.

Back in October 2015, the social network revamped its messaging system. Previously, you had your "Inbox," and an "Other" folder where messages from people who aren't friends or friends-of-friends would end up. But it replaced this second folder with "Message Requests" - which let people you're not connected with ask to be able to talk.

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But what very few people realise is there is now also a third category of messages: Filtered Message Requests. These filtered messages are what Facebook thinks is spam, and so doesn't even notify you about. They're also not easy to find.

There has been a spate of articles over the last few days explaining how to access them. Judging by the reaction on Twitter, almost no one knew it was there.

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Daniel Emery

A lot of the time, the feature appears to be fulfilling its purpose pretty well - protecting people from strangers' spam they've got no interest in viewing.

Former BBC technology journalist Daniel Emery contacted Business Insider after reading our story and checking the "filtered" folder out of curiosity.

He told us that back in February, the partner of an old college friend messaged him to tell him that his friend had died - but the message was filtered, so he only saw it today, two months later.

Emery said: "He was a friend of mine from when I was a student in Aberdeen. Used to be a good mate, obviously lost touch a few years ago, as you do."

He had thought about reaching out, but never got round to it - and then saw the message letting him know his friend had "popped his clogs."

"So its his partner - I don't quite know who she is - picking up the pieces ... it's all a bit strange really."

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Emery's not the only one to have experienced something like this.

Matt Spicer, from Bristol, England said that his wife start crying after discovering the "filtered" inbox - because it contained a message sent by her cousin, who died before it was ever read.

Clearly, this hasn't been a complete success.

But what can Facebook do about this? It's a tricky one. If it errs on the side of caution, and filters more, then important messages will continue to fall through the cracks. But if it relaxes its filters, then more spam will likely get through too - and people will complain. (Facebook did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

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David Emery, who missed the message telling him of his friend's death, would like Facebook to modify its messaging feature to add a more straightforward spam folder.

"Gmail and Google, for all its flaws, has a pretty sensible system," he told Business Insider. "There is a folder for spam, you can look into it if you want, you can pull things out. It's not hidden from you and I think the issue with this is it's kind of a bit too much 'nanny state.'"

He added: "Facebook is trying to be overprotective. Overprotective comes at a cost, and things like this happening are exactly that ... hiding it is never a good thing."

If you want to check your Filtered Message Requests in the mobile app, load up Settings, then click on "People," then click on "Message Requests," then click on "See filtered requests." If you're on the desktop version of Facebook, click on the drop-down Messages tab, then on "Message Requests," then press "See filtered requests." For more detailed instructions, read this »

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