The internet’s most recognizable thumbs-up is about to disappear from everywhere but Facebook itself.
Meta has announced that Facebook’s Like and Comment buttons — those little social widgets that once appeared on millions of websites — will officially go dark on Feb. 10, 2026. The company announced the move in a developer blog post by Thuan Le and Jennifer Lin, stating that the change is part of an ongoing effort to “focus on tools and features that deliver the most value to developers and businesses.”
These external buttons allowed people to like or comment on an article or product page without ever leaving the site, with those interactions later shared back to Facebook.
But come 2026, they’ll simply vanish. Meta says the plugins will “gracefully degrade by rendering as a 0x0 pixel (invisible element)” rather than causing any site errors. Developers don’t need to take action, though they can remove the old code “for a cleaner user experience,” the company added.
Meta says the change is part of its ongoing effort to modernize its developer platform. The company described the plugins as “reflect[ing] an earlier era of web development,” adding that their usage “has naturally declined as the digital landscape has evolved.”
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A symbolic end to the early social web
For many, this move feels like a quiet closing chapter in the story of the social internet.
From the early 2010s, these plugins formed a digital bridge between websites and Facebook’s social graph, a network that once defined how people interacted online. But as privacy scandals, stricter regulations, and new platforms reshaped user behavior, the Like and Comment buttons lost their power.
Still, this doesn’t mean the Facebook Like button itself is going away; it will remain alive and well on Facebook. What’s ending is its long run across the open web.
Meta’s decision to retire the external Facebook Like and Comment buttons marks the end of an influential but fading chapter of the internet. Once the sign of online approval, the Like button helped make the web more social and more connected.
Now, 16 years later, it’s quietly stepping off the stage.
And if you’re watching where Meta engagement could go next, check out our article on Meta’s Vibes feed — a short-form, AI-generated video feed that unifies chat, creative tools, and glasses support, pointing to a post-“Like” playbook for the social web.