Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Photography
  4. News

Instagram ditches plans for stand-alone Direct messaging app

Add as a preferred source on Google

After experimenting with a dedicated messaging app, Instagram is shuttering its stand-alone Direct app. Tests of moving Direct to a separate app never reached Messenger-level status, which likely mixed with Facebook’s new focus on privacy and potentially merging messaging tools in the decision to shut down the separate app. Instagram confirmed that the Direct app will be shut down over the next month. (The messaging features remain intact inside the Instagram app.)

Instagram started the Direct app as a test in limited markets in 2017, including Chile, Israel, Italy, Portugal, Turkey, and Uruguay. At the time, the company aimed to bring features not available inside the Instagram app into the dedicated messaging platform. Direct opened straight to the camera, much like Snapchat. The app also had filters that weren’t available inside Instagram. While the Direct messaging feature never left Instagram, users that downloaded the test no longer had the messaging options inside Instagram.

Recommended Videos

Instagram is now alerting users via an in-app pop-up message that the app will no longer be supported sometime in the next month. Because messages will automatically revert back to their original home inside the Instagram app, the company says users of the app don’t have to do anything to save conversations.

In a statement, Instagram said that the Direct app test is being rolled back, while future updates will focus on the messaging option still built into the Instagram app. While Direct never made it out of testing, Instagram used the app to test other messaging features like web-based access to messages.

The news comes a month after Facebook began testing adding Messenger back into the original Facebook app. The switch to a stand-alone messaging app frustrated many users back in 2014, but allowed for more features than what could be built into the Facebook app.

Following several privacy scandals, Facebook is now shifting its focus toward privacy. As part of that shift, the company aims to allow users to send messages across its family of apps, which also includes the encrypted WhatsApp. While the stand-alone Direct app never seemed to gain the traction of Messenger, that new focus could be one of the reasons the company is abandoning the tests.

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
You can now generate songs in your iMessage chats
iMessage users can now turn chats into short AI-generated songs
Text, Business Card, Paper

Suno has added an iMessage extension to its iOS app, letting users generate 30-second songs from voice recordings or typed prompts inside a Messages conversation.

The feature is available in the latest version of the Suno app and requires both people in the chat to have it installed. Users can access Suno from the plus menu in Messages, create a track, and share it without opening the standalone app.

Read more
The UK just proposed a midnight social media curfew for teens that they can bypass in seconds
The government wants 16- and 17-year-olds off apps like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube from midnight to 6 AM, but the restriction has a built-in workaround.
Girl using a black phone while lying down

The UK just proposed a midnight social media curfew for teenagers, but it comes with a built-in escape hatch. According to the BBC, the UK government plans to restrict social media access for 16- and 17-year-olds between midnight and 6 AM, preventing them from using apps like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. But getting around it will take nothing more than a few taps.

A curfew teens can switch off

Read more
X is teaching its AI algorithm something social networks once understood
A new ranking tweak gives mutuals more visibility after X found that friendship data was missing from an algorithm shaping who appears in replies
Twitter X Logo Featured

X has discovered a bold new strategy for making social media feel social again. It’s going to show your posts more often to people you actually know.

According to X product head Nikita Bier, the platform is boosting the visibility of posts among mutuals, meaning accounts that follow each other. He said this relationship data had been missing from the algorithm, leaving familiar accounts less visible when reply sections filled up.

Read more