Nope, maybe you should read back then
There is definitely a consensus on an answer on page one, but that doesn't make it the correct answer.
Alright, I read up a bit more and I think I understand it now. Photons do not have mass. It's impossible to quantitatively measure and confirm this though, which is why there's such a large amount of controversy surrounding this question. It makes more sense in our current version of the universe for the photon to have no mass. The fact that photons react to gravity/force can be explained away because when light is sucked into a blackhole, it's not caused by gravity. Gravity is just a measure of the closest distance between objects in the curvature of spacetime. Therefore, photons only need have energy to be able to experience a force from another entity.
Furthermore, by f=ma, force incurred by this will yield a theoretically infinite acceleration because the mass of a photon is 0. This fits nicely into the theory of general relativity; no physical object can reach the speed of light because they do not have 0 mass.