Instagram is continuing to fight against bullying on its platform, this time by making it easier to control negativity with the help of a few new features.
You'll now be able to delete negative comments in bulk, as well as block or restrict multiple accounts.
Of course, this is more useful for those with larger followings who tend to get thousands of comments on just one post. Rather than having to sit there and delete each comment individually, they can now take care of all of them with a few taps.
Those with iOS can enable the feature by tapping on a comment and then the dotted icon located in the top right corner. From there, select the Manage Comments option and choose up to 25 comments to delete simultaneously. You can block accounts in bulk by tapping on More Options.
Android users already had the ability to delete comments in bulk, but they can now also block or restrict accounts by holding down on a comment, tapping the dotted icon, and then selecting Block or Restrict.
In another attempt to curb bullying, the company is also rolling out controls to manage who tags or mentions you on Instagram.
In your Settings, you can choose to give permission to mention or tag you in a comment, caption, or on a Story to everyone, only people you follow, or no one at all.
To highlight positivity, Instagram will soon be testing Pinned Comments, in which users will be able to select a specific number of their favorite comments and pin them to the top of their comments thread.
Seeing as how everyone is clutching their phones tightly during this pandemic, there's really no better time to start emphasizing the importance of positivity on social media by rolling out some features to help enforce it.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Instagram introduces new features to help create a more positive space-款曲周至网
sitemap
文章
2527
浏览
9153
获赞
985
EU is investigating Apple Pay and App Store for breaking competition rules
The European Commission has launched two formal investigations into Apple's business practices overThe summoning circle meme calls upon your deepest, darkest desires
If you could request anyone and anything, what would it be?The new "summoning circle" meme has TwittFitbit has developed a ventilator to help COVID
Just like Dyson and NASA before it, Fitbit has now designed a ventilator in response to the coronaviThe summoning circle meme calls upon your deepest, darkest desires
If you could request anyone and anything, what would it be?The new "summoning circle" meme has TwittGoogle Doodle celebrates tactile paving inventor Seiichi Miyake
A new Google Doodle might cause you to appreciate what's under your feet.In a neat illustration on MA small child tried to fight Gritty
Gritty has been attacked by yet another small child.The Philadelphia Flyers mascot got into a scufflThese coronavirus trackers can help you sort through the info overload
If you're like me, the daily barrage of information about the progress of the coronavirus pandemic cThe dark side of college
College-bound vloggers are increasingly uploading "college decision reveal" videos to YouTube. But wThe best of Martha Stewart's deeply weird personal Instagram account
To truly understand the heart of Martha Stewart, you need to dig deep into her personal Instagram acAOC invited Bobby from 'Queer Eye' to help decorate her office
Queer Eye's master of decor, Bobby Berk, is in Washington, D.C., for a week and he has some big planGmail's compose button on Android gets bigger, but only when you scroll down
Gmail's compose button is annoyingly small and unintuitive on phones. You may have not noticed it, bDonald Trump is back on Twitch after a short ban for ‘hateful conduct’
How long will you get banned from Twitch for disparaging immigrants on multiple livestreams?The answApple Maps now has electric vehicle route planning like Tesla
At Apple's online Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC), anyone with an electric vehicle noticed a nLenovo Flex 5G laptop now available through Verizon
5G isn't just for phones. Starting this week, you can buy a real, actual laptop that connects to theThe FBI must be stoked about Zoom's encryption policy
Zoom has big privacy plans — for its paying customers, that is.After getting caught falsely cl