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Facebook's buried Save feature has 250 million users a month, and a new button to help it spread

Facebook's buried Save feature has 250 million users a month, and a new button to help it spread

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A new DVR for the web

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It's been almost four years since Facebook introduced "save for later," a way for storing articles, videos, and other things you find in the service in a dedicated part of the app. But your list of saved items has never had a prominent place in Facebook's apps — to access it, you must first tap the dreaded "more" button, then scroll halfway down the list of options. And yet despite its relative obscurity, Facebook says 250 million people take advantage of the save feature every month — and the company has a new strategy to make that number grow.

Today at the F8 developer conference, Facebook is introducing a Save to Facebook button for the web. Publishers can now add the button to their standard article templates, and whenever a user taps the button, it will save the article or video directly to their Facebook queue. If that sounds a lot like Pocket and Instapaper, well, it is — it's just baked into one of the most popular apps in the world. There are key differences, though — unlike Pocket and Instapaper, Facebook doesn't strip articles of their formatting and advertisements. Given the high percentage of traffic that many publishers derive from Facebook, the company may have more success in getting them to add a "Save to Facebook" button than Pocket, which offers a similar button of its own.

save button

At launch, Facebook's save button will be available on Product Hunt, the popular Silicon Valley coolhunting site, and on Overstock. The latter site demonstrates how save buttons have potential benefits as e-commerce tools, although why anyone would save an item to Facebook instead of just leaving its tab open on Overstock until they decide whether they want it is beyond me. More interesting will be if big publishers add the button to their article pages. In an era where media companies are striving to maximize their total content views, the lure of additional traffic from Facebook may prove irresistible.