Facebook offers new ways to interact with exes; tries to ease heartache of breakups
Facebook offers new ways to interact with exes; tries to ease heartache of breakups
After changing their relationship status on Facebook, users will be allowed to remove their names from past posts linking them to a former partner.

San Francisco: Facebook is trying to ease the heartache of breaking up.

The new feature will allow people who have split up with a spouse or partner to turn on an option that spares them the emotional pain of constantly seeing their ex-lover's posts and pictures in their news feed on the world's largest social network.

Facebook will begin testing the breakup protection on mobile devices in the US before deciding whether to offer it to all of its 1.5 billion accountholders worldwide.

The option is designed for people who don't want to risk offending a former husband, wife, girlfriend or boyfriend by taking the more extreme step of ejecting or blocking them from their Facebook network.

After changing their relationship status on Facebook, people will also be allowed to remove their names from past posts linking them to a former partner.

"This work is part of our ongoing effort to develop resources for people who may be going through difficult moments in their lives," Facebook product manager Kelly Winters wrote in a blog post.

See less of a former partner’s name and profile picture around Facebook without having to unfriend or block them.

The breakup protection serves as another reminder of how deeply ingrained Facebook has become in society.

More than 1 billion people now hang out on Facebook at least once a day and those who have the network's addictive mobile application installed on their smartphones tend to visit even more frequently.

Limit the photos, videos or status updates that a former partner will see.

The Menlo Park, California, company has incentive to try to keep its users as happy as possible.

People who become upset with what appears in their Facebook feeds are more likely to avoid coming to the network, depriving the company of the opportunity to collect more information about their preferences and show them ads aimed at those interests.

Edit who can see their past posts with a former partner and untag themselves from posts with that person.

The formula has turned Facebook into a huge success story since Mark Zuckerberg founded the service in a Harvard University dorm room more than a decade ago.

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