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There's no avoiding Google+ (wsj.com)
108 points by anigbrowl on Jan 2, 2013 | hide | past | favorite | 107 comments



Obvious comparison but interesting how close this feels to the DOJ hitting MSFT over the head for bundling:

"The issue central to the case was whether Microsoft was allowed to bundle its flagship Internet Explorer (IE) web browser software with its Microsoft Windows operating system . . . Underlying these disputes were questions over whether Microsoft altered or manipulated its application programming interfaces (APIs) to favor Internet Explorer over third party web browsers." (1)

When does leveraging a platform flip from good business to unfair competition?

(1) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Microsoft


When does leveraging a platform flip from good business to unfair competition?

The moment you gain monopoly status in one market and attempt to leverage that status in another. Until then, happy bundling! Read the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law docs from that case. They make it pretty clear.

http://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/f3800/msjudgex.htm

http://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/f218600/218633.htm


I don't think that's the right thing to be looking at. That's the district court, which wouldn't be binding anyway, and if I remember correctly the appellate court had some pretty harsh things to say about the district court's opinion in that case. (As in, start over and try again, although the trying again never actually happened because at that point Microsoft decided to settle.)


It's my understanding of that it was Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson's interview(s) with the press (an embargoed activity) while he was still hearing the case that were at issue (as well as some issues about liability for remedies). They did not have issues with his application of the Sherman Antitrust Act or relevant precedent, though.

From Wikipedia: "...the appeals court did not overturn the findings of fact. The D.C. Circuit remanded the case for consideration of a proper remedy under a more limited scope of liability."

...and then Bush replaced Clinton in the White House, after which the DoJ dropped the case.

So I think I still have a good answer for aresant's question.


>They did not have issues with his application of the Sherman Antitrust Act or relevant precedent, though.

I think they did. I'll give you a quote from the actual appellate opinion: "To establish a dangerous probability of success, plaintiffs must as a threshold matter show that the browser market can be monopolized, i.e., that a hypothetical monopolist in that market could enjoy market power. This, in turn, requires plaintiffs (1) to define the relevant market and (2) to demonstrate that substantial barriers to entry protect that market. Because plaintiffs have not carried their burden on either prong, we reverse without remand."

Naturally there is a context to that (and they didn't reverse everything the district court did, but some things) and you're invited to read the entire opinion if you're interested.[1] Incidentally, if there is one thing I've found Wikipedia to be regularly wrong or incomplete about, it's the content of court opinions.

Moreover, findings of fact are a distinct thing from conclusions of law. "Findings of fact" are usually decided by juries, but sometimes by trial judges when there is no jury, and it means deciding what actually happened, not deciding what the law is. For example, a finding of fact might be whether Microsoft did actually pressure OEMs not to bundle Netscape, but not whether or not having done that would be a violation of the antitrust laws, which would be a conclusion of law rather than a finding of fact.

(I should point out that we're having a nice theoretical discussion here and that this is not legal advice, and if you need legal advice you should consult an attorney.)

[1] Here is one freely available copy of the appellate opinion I found through Google: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/msdoj/msft_ruling.html


Thank you for posting that link. It made for good reading over my morning coffee.

While I am not a lawyer either, my reading is that you have quoted from a section of the document pertaining to a claimed violation (in the Conclusions of Law) that are with regard to § 2 of the Sherman act (monopoly maintenace), whereas aresant's question is with respect to product tying, which is a § 1 violation, which was merely remanded – and, eventually, dropped.


>While I am not a lawyer either, my reading is that you have quoted from a section of the document pertaining to a claimed violation (in the Conclusions of Law) that are with regard to § 2 of the Sherman act (monopoly maintenace), whereas aresant's question is with respect to product tying, which is a § 1 violation, which was merely remanded – and, eventually, dropped.

OK sure. And "remand" means the trial judge made mistakes and has to try again, not that they did everything right. When they do substantially everything right it will say "affirmed" and then that part of the case is over (or gets appealed to a higher court instead of going back down). And as you already pointed out, the case being settled/dropped probably had a lot more to do with politics and the incoming Bush administration than anything to do with the court system or the law or whether the original district judge was right or wrong.


This has been discussed in depth in Apple/Android threads.

The point is, you have to get a monopoly first. Google doesn't have one.


Except they have, in search


I believe that statement is being actually tested right now in the US courts.

Also it looks like in EU it is officially a monopoly and in Brazil it isn't.

Also I owe @aresant an apology for rejecting his idea outright. It looked so obvious to me with bing owning about 30% of search market share!


Who are they selling 'search' to? Didn't think they had a big market in corporate intranet search....?


And smartphone / mobile.


I'm not a lawyer, but I don't think it's "bundling" when you add features to your product. The contention in the Microsoft case was that they forced OEMs to "bundle" IE and block Netscape.

There is also the small matter of Google being free, and the lack of any meaningful lock-ins (this being the web and all) and the matter of Facebook being the leading social network, and other such subtleties that make these cases very dissimilar.

There is also the discussion of whether or not the DOJ was wise in pursuing that case which they subsequently lost, seeing as last I checked IE still ships with Windows.


> the matter of Facebook being the leading social network

Netscape was the leading browser when IE started being bundled. I don't disagree with you, but I don't think that argument makes a lot of sense.


Windows was the only viable OS at the time, and when Microsoft forced OEMs to include IE and blocked them from making deals with Netscape it triggered that whole thing.

Here Google is just a website on the internet, granted it's a significant website but so is Facebook, and you don't have to go through Google to reach Facebook. My point is that Facebook is a large entity that exists alongside Google, and so does Twitter and many others so it's not a one vendor market.


The way that Google is pushing G+ down my throat has really made me more determined not to sign up.

The question that I ask myself every time I get redirected to a G+ sign-up page is What's in it for me? My friends don't use it it and I have no interest in using it as a glorified RSS/Twitter.


I think the occasional HackerNews posts are the only times I have ever ended up on a G+ page, in all honesty.


Yes, and on my phone it requires me to login to read a page. This is why I know skip any G+ links here.


Me too. I had to go in and change my real name to a fake name thanks to these policies. I don't want a decade of commenting history to suddenly have my real name because of some policy change at google.


"Vic Gundotra, who is in charge of Google+, says he sees little in-house controversy today. "There was more resistance two years ago," when the project wasn't well understood internally, he says."

This is absolute bullshit.

As I've mentioned before, I quit about 1.5 years ago, around the time the G+ fiasco was starting (and partially for that reason.) I also know, directly or indirectly, dozens of people who still work there. I can tell you that, if the internal complaints have died down, it's only because of the pervasive feeling of futility about it within the company. The engineers are most probably still not happy about the creeping Social-ificiation of everything, and they're not going to be happy, but they're also well aware that the company does not give two shits about their feelings on the subject.


I just happened to register a Gmail account. You're given a Google+ profile by default but you can dig into the settings and delete it. It is a hassle and it is obnoxious, but it is possible.

That being said, I'm really frustrated with Google and other Social Media companies for this aggressive behavior.

There are hardly any laws in place protecting consumer information or regulating the troves of information being collected through social media. I imagine Facebook and Google at this point must have more extensive "dossiers" on more people than spy agencies.

It makes me a little uncomfortable, I don't fully understand why. Nor can I grasp what the implications of all this data collection/mining are yet. But here we are going full speed ahead.

Also I think this mindset officially makes me an old fart.


It never ceases to amaze me how people can go on gleefully accepting the thousands of dollars worth of free services that Google, FB et al. provide them year after year, and then in the next breath cry foul when said companies use the information voluntarily provided to them to try and make money.

No offense, but if you were really an old fart you would be accepting some personal responsibility for your role in this transaction.


You don't seem to appreciate what a major change G+ will be for some of Google's users. I for one would never want the following scenario from the article to happen. Ever.

    "You'll go to search for a camp stove on Google, 
    and you'll find that your friend just bought one, and 
    you'll be able to ask him about it," says Dylan Casey,
    a former Google+ product manager who now works at Path 
    Inc., a smartphone-based social network.
Had I known that Google would one day decide to go social and share my private life, possibly without my consent, then I would have never "gleefully accepted the thousands of dollars worth of free services" in the first place. Fact is that this is a change of direction for Google and people have every right to voice their opinion about it... just like the TOS with Instagram... How is this any different?


First of all, how credible is a Path PM's opinion on the "camp stove" example? Conflict of interest, anyone? Did Vic G or anyone official at Google say that's going to happen?

IMHO, what's more likely to happen is: You search for a camp stove, and your G+ friend has written a _public_ review of one, and your personalized search results show your friend's review as well. Personally, I would find that quite helpful since I can now contact my friend directly about this, but even if you don't, why not disable personalized results for yourself?


That's a quote from "a former G+ product manager". His credibility is beside the point anyway... this was a hypothetical feature mentioned in the article that conveniently illustrated a potential privacy concern.

(To your prediction of how this feature might play out in reality I would say that you are probably right, but also that I don't give two shits about what my friends buy OR about what they publicly review.)

What we know for certain is that Google is aggressively pushing its users onto G+ and that is the real heart of the problem. It's a bait-and-switch. I have no intention of using Google as a social network and I have no guarantees that I will be able to opt out of current or future features. The writing is on the wall -- Google will be social. That upsets some people.


Thousands of dollars' worth? Stretching it, I'd say.

Anyway. Yes. Personal responsibility... for not being cynical enough to realize that you never should have trusted the nefarious fiends like Google to begin with when you started using their services.

No, really though: when someone like Google lulls a bunch of people into thinking that they'll be doing one thing, and then do another, that's what the layman calls "bait and switch". (Go ahead, blame the victims.)

The economist would examine the system, question whether there was any tendency toward a natural monopoly because of network effects (possible but not certain), and point out that because there are high switching costs that the market for social media and like services doesn't really meet the prerequisites for being an efficient one (low transaction costs). The result is an inefficient market causing a deadweight loss to society, at least in the short to intermediate run... still nothing to celebrate in any event.


We already provide Google with a payoff: They give us good search results/Youtube videos in exchange for eyeballs on their ads. Now this ramming of their surveillance network down our throats is obnoxious, and complaining is hardly the bad form you are making it out to be.


The problem here is that there's almost no paid alternative: Gmail still has the best web UI, and do you know any search company with a subscription fee? That is, there's no alternative payment method: you pay with personal details, dollars not accepted.


Before, 99 % of internet surfers were anonymous. Now, when they browse their facebook intranet, everything they do is logged and recorded. And now, we see the same with Google. I tried to register a youtube account for my foosball association a few days back. It wouldn't let me use a nickname. It had to be a real name with a gender, a google+ account and a gmail. I ended up using my own youtube account. They've asked me about 15 times if I want to use my real name on youtube, I always say no.


It is clearly an abuse of monopoly. I am already using GMail, Free google apps, search, android apps review and many other things. If now I have to do the same thing, I am forced to either sign up for Google plus, which also force me to give my complete name along with other personal details, If not I can not use all these services. What a strange, is it not a abuse of monopoly? I dont want to give my personal details, is it not my right? Why google is forcing me to do so? Why I cant keep using android review withoug using Google plus?


Is it just me or is there a recent surge of G+ stuff here? Almost seems systematic. Some free books post with the G+ book, some Facebook "bashing" posted on G+ now this.

Maybe I'm just paranoid but it smells like a targeted campaign :P


No, just whimsy in this case. I haven't been very enthusiastic or made heavy use of G+, but I've found it gradually becoming useful despite minimizing my time spent on it.


Targeted by who? The coverage of G+ seems to be almost consistently negative.


Maybe some social-media marketers have taken "any publicity is good publicity" a little too seriously and decided that bashing G+ is easier than praising it. ;)


Ah, maybe they hired the same advertising firm as the IE team then. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lD9FAOPBiDk


it's far simpler than that - social news sites like reddit and hn have 'fads' - surges of interest in a topic that involve lots of people posting about it, a bunch of debate, and then a dying off of attention as people move to the next fad. it's not even anything new; the same thing happened on Usenet back in the day, and probably on bbses before that, and in newspaper letter pages even earlier.


If you've activated your Google+ profile in any way, Picasa will now detect this and will no longer offer to upload photos to PicasaWeb, only to Google+. I believe the back end may be the same, but the sharing UI and access control is different.


The backend is indeed the same (same API), only the UI is different. You can access the old UI at https://picasaweb.google.com/home


You can access the PicasaWeb website, but if you have G+ enabled, you won't be able to use the Picasa desktop app to add new PicasaWeb albums, it will now only upload to G+.

Free service, you get what you pay for, etc., but this odd cascading change is the kind of thing that drives my (70+) parents crazy, and they take note of the fact that it was Google that broke the thing they were comfortable using.


I work on the Photos backend team at Google.

Picasaweb and Google+ use the same back-end. The back-end makes no distinction between albums created in Picasaweb and albums created in G+. Having an option in Picasa desktop client to control whether an album is created in Picasaweb or Google+ would be nonsensical.

I just tried creating an album in Picasa desktop client. I clicked on "Sync to web" and the album was uploaded and was available from both Picasaweb and in G+ Photos with identical functionality.

I tried creating a second album, but instead of turning on "sync to web" I clicked on the "Share your album on G+" button. I 'shared' the album with myself. The resulting album is available in either Picasaweb or G+.


Hey ... I think I already know the answers to these questions, but I thought I would ask anyway:

1) Any upgrades the Picasa Web interface planned? 2) Why when I search for tags it shows everyone's photos by default? 3) Why do tag searches not return all photos that are tagged with the term?

Thanks.


I think you might be confused. I was confused, too, when they first made the change, but tried it anyway. Even though it says Google + Upload it still allows you to choose your Picasa Web albums to import to. If you create a new one it is created in Picasa Web Albums.

The scary part was knowing the security settings. By default the album is set to "Only You", but you can change it "Limited, anyone with link" or "Public."

If you go into Google + it'll show you all your albums through that interface with the same security enabled.


At some point Google should insert a reference to every user who has signed up on any google property into their google+ user db. At least then we will have one huge news day about how "well" google+ is doing and that will be the end of this farce.

The impetus for such integration comes from the top: Google Chief Executive Larry Page has sought more aggressive measures to get people to use Google+, two people familiar with the matter say.

That is extremely telling about Google. Taken positively, it means the founder has bet the company on social. Taken negatively, it means google's biggest bet is so far a spammy and largely disliked product.


Wow. So much anger from people here just for Google asking to create a G+ profile.

Is it really that bad?

Google is a free service that we reap a lot of benefits from. We have a lot of software engineers here. Google is indispensable followed by Stack Overflow. I highly doubt we'd be able to finish an app if Google goes down.

What's a couple of minutes to set up one?

We know that Google+ is also a way for Google to more accurately target ads. Advertising is the main source of revenue. If Google can't make enough money off advertising, it would have to shut some services down.

This is why I don't use AdBlock. If a free site is useful enough that I visit it regularly, I'll let them serve me ads.


It's starting to get silly. That's why people are angry.

I'll give you a personal example. If you do not have a Google+ account, but you have a Google account and GMail: You'll get annoying messages with "WHATS UP IN G+ DAWG" periodically and randomly.

But surely, you can unsubscribe? It's a bit obnoxious to opt-out, but hey, right? Nope! You need to "Log on Google+ to change your notification settings".


YouTube was an optionally pseudonymous social network (with subscriptions to feeds, followers, comments, etc.) built around videos. I am not a big YouTube user but I can see people who are really into the culture of YouTube being torqued about having that culture re-engineered.


Wow. So much lack of understanding about what the issue is.

I don't want my search results, the YouTube videos I watch, my mail or ANY of my Google activity to be made available either to my friends or to the general public.

With a normal Google account I could say this with certainty. But given their behaviour recently I couldn't say the same thing with a Google+ account.


Can you show me something that Google shared publicly (or your friends) that you didn't do yourself?

I have a Google+ account. Posts show up on my profile because I shared it publicly myself.

None of my search results, YouTube views, Email are public.

(Also it's stupid for me to reply to you given your history. But your reply is just not based on any facts.



Well played.


I absolutely HATE the fact that google forces me to have a profile on Google+, but Google Hangout is so compelling that I've done it anyways.

I am hoping that Google bumps up security and visibility preferences for Google+ profiles in 2013.


> I am hoping that Google bumps up security and visibility preferences for Google+ profiles in 2013.

What options are you wanting? In my experience Google+ is much more upfront about what gets shared to who than other social networks (especially Facebook). It's based around Circles and that's all about limiting who sees what.


All the more so when you're required to have a Gmail account to activate android devices.

Tying indeed. DOJ?


This is simply not true.


Um. It most certainly is for at least some vendor-supplied Android builds, in my experience.

It may not be necessary for all Android activations (particularly CyanogenMod builds), but there are phones for which this is at the very least a practical, if not essential, requirement.


On my Nexus 4 and 7 you can answer that you don't have a google account and it will allow you to set it up without one, this has been the case on every Android distribution I've seen. I don't think that Google or AOSP builds have ever required a google account and it's not really fair to blame them if a particular vendor does.


I have multiple Google accounts, from well before they required telephone authentication, and use multiple Google services (gmail, youtube, search primarily) but I do not have any Google+ accounts.

I know this for certain because if I actively try to access Google+ from any of the Google services, it asks me to first create one.

I have also never tried to change any Google service or access it differently so as to avoid Google+ account creation.

So, clearly, Google+ can be avoided, if you never had it.

That said, I do browse with scripting disabled (Google is not trusted by default and neither gmail, youtube or search require it) and I only log into Google services from trusted, i.e. personally owned, devices. I can read posts on plus.google.com with this configuration. I have also never given my real name to an online service account, except at the time of individual payments - financial information always claims among the highest protections of laws.

In my opinion, I think Google has been very fair with people who are only interested in access to their individual services, especially those that well predate Google+, without being bloated or forced away by the rest of their ever widening ecosystem.

Compared to Facebook and even Microsoft, Google is angelic in terms of access, privacy and service encapsulation considerations. I cannot compare to Apple since I only use them for music purchases.


I really don't feel the pressure yet. The article is certainly right in that Google seems to try hard - it's just that I couldn't be ar.. - erm - bothered to resurrect my dormant, blocked ('real name..') G+ account.

What do I lose, even at this point?

- Youtube comments? That medium is 'watch only' for a long time already. Reading the comments hurts and was never funny or interesting. Writing comments didn't even cross my mind unless it's 4am and I had a beer or two too many.

- "Play" store reviews: That thing went basically into the direction of Youtube and was full of people that had no clue but liked to post stuff.

(Before anyone claims that G+ will make this better and so-called "real names" will fix that: Yeah, right. See HN. Twitter. Every other forum under the sun. I don't buy it)

Hangouts might be cool, but I couldn't care less about hangouts without people to hang out with. Since I never really joined G+ yet, this is a chicken and egg problem (public hangouts? Naah, not for me, I prefer text over video for most content). No G+ account, no G+ contacts, no need for that feature, period.

The only one time I felt I'm missing out was when my local Ingress resistance started organizing raids on G+. I'm mostly kidding, of course.

So, back to the point of the article: I see that they are trying really, really hard to sell G+ to the masses and integrate it everywhere. What I'd like to understand is: Do others feel that it works? That there really is 'no avoiding' G+?

I disagree.


I don't see how using google+ to add reviews results in using google plus to post. In other words, this integration might show an increase in ridiculous stats google is posting, but it doesn't really increase amount of time user spends on the actual site (so he doesn't read newsfeed). Thus any comparison with facebook stats is not possible.

Disclaimer: I don't use either social network, but in their stats facebook will consider me an inactive user and google will consider me an active user.


Research firm comScore Inc. a year ago estimated that Google+ users spent an average of three minutes on the site each month, versus more than 400 minutes for the average Facebook user. In the U.S., Google+ had nearly 28.7 million unique visitors through PCs in October—well below Facebook's 149 million, comScore says. Those numbers don't include mobile-device users.


I still prefer Google+ to App.net.


Google+ should be Google, in the same way Gmail and Google Talk are just the same Google accounts. Someone said here today how he found Hangouts complicated on mobile, because it wasn't well integrated into the OS, the way Facetime is. And that's exactly why Google+ needs to become synonymous with a Google account. Apple allows you do use any and all of their services with your itunes account, from iCloud to payments, doesn't it?

You don't have to use it, just like people don't have to use all of Apple's services, and as long as they are not too in-your-face about it.


> and as long as they are not too in-your-face about it

"In-your-face" such as prompting me with a page-modal dialog every time I log into YouTube, demanding that I create a G+ account, and if I say "no" actually requiring a reason before the dialog will go away? I currently work around it by logging in, closing the tab when the dialog comes up, and opening a new tab.


I agree it's horrible, but I gave them a BS reason and that modal has gone away and never come back.


There's a difference between pushing you to transition to the new model and pushing you to use the products.

While I agree that that's pretty in-your-face, that's not what GP was talking about.


Wow, someone thinks Hangouts are complicated on mobile? All one has to do is open the app, and bang, they can start/join hangouts.


I don't think you 'get it' at all.

Apple has merely provided SSO. All of its services have always been private (unless you explicitly share) and will always be. Google has taken what were private services e.g. YouTube and content and exposing that through a social network.

And for most people it is that blurring of the boundary between private and public that makes what Google is doing a bit concerning.


Exactly.

Seeing all that private activity with no way to capitalize on its inherent virality has driven Google away from their natural core. From a company which started out with an quirky barebones homepage, deliberately eschewing the natural monetizability of it, this new aggressive identity grab is a big cultural transformation.


Google accounts have long come with public profiles. How is an empty Google+ profile different?


It's not just about having a profile or not. Google seems to be changing services to require G+.

For example, you can no longer comment on YouTube or write a review in the Play store without a G+ profile (or at least I can't). This means that activity in those Google properties is no longer pseudonymous. That is very unappealing to some.


> For example, you can no longer comment on YouTube or write a review in the Play store without a G+ profile (or at least I can't). This means that activity in those Google properties is no longer pseudonymous. That is very unappealing to some.

From Google's point of view here there is only gain--YouTube comments are some of the lowest form of internet communication to be found. App reviews are not much better. Requiring people to have some sort of profile is not going to lower the quality of reviews, it will only limit their quantity (which is not the lacking factor).


Google currently offers YouTube users the option of either using their G+ profile or a YouTube profile.

I tried the G+ profile option for a while, but I didn't really like it. The first time I posted something publicly, people started commenting on my Google+ posts, apparently upset because they did not get the joke I made. Someone in the YouTube comments looked up my profile, figured out where I lived, and threatened to come to "BrookLine New York" to adjust my viewpoint. I found it hilarious but most people would probably be scared.

I switched back to using a real-name-inspired nickname. You blend in better and people won't bother you except in comment replies, which you can easily ignore.


I think it was clear long ago that Google+ is just Google, or at least it's what Google thinks their future is. It's easy enough to avoid Google+, though: just stop using Google products and services. There are plenty of great alternatives available.


do you have a suggestion for a good email alternative?


I've been using Rackspace hosted email (actually was webmail.us before being bought) with my own domain name for over 8 years and my experience has been nothing but excellent. It's $2/month/mailbox now, but unfortunately they now have a $10/month account minimum, so not a good option if you just need one mailbox.

http://www.rackspace.com/apps/email_hosting/rackspace_email/...


The only part of G+ which i absolutely love is hangouts. Still think everything else is a privacy concern. The strange thing is that i am witnessing a significant migration of non-geeks to G+ from Facebook. I didn't think i'd see the day. I guess people are picking lesser of two evils.


Google+ whatever, the writing in this article is really bad. There are so many confusing pronouns, redundant sentences, and poorly integrated quotes that I had a hard time making it through the article. Whats up wsj?


Google's growing G+ surveillance is a worry. This is why after watching the 29C3 keynote (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNsePZj_Yks) and whistleblower panel (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDM3MqHln8U) a couple of days ago I blocked all the main google domains (mail, maps, G+, accounts, picasa, etc.) via /etc/hosts and committed to only accessing Gmail via Tor (https://www.torproject.org/). Facebook I already deleted and block via AdBlockPlus (though I now recommend http://trueblockplus.org/), but G+ is harder and more insidious to stay free of. After a few days of use, I am quite happy with my new strategy: keep email (or anything personally identifying, like banking) in a different and anonymized browser. Keep everything else in a general browser that never sees you identified.

Edit: add URLs, TrueBlockPlus reference.


You're my hero :) I've been wanting to do just that, but keep putting it off. Maybe now is the time.

Sadly, though, I think the battle for privacy is largely lost. Too much is at stake for both FB and Google to play it nice. They will go as far as it takes to integrate themselves into every bit of our lives.

This is an exciting time to be an advertiser :)


Why not just use IMAP for gmail access?


If you are going to use IMAP, why would you use gmail at all?

Gmail's main selling point is the excellent web-interface, not the way the mail-store works well with IMAP.


>If you are going to use IMAP, why would you use gmail at all?

As an alternate email address, for any number of a variety of reasons.


That was a really effective ad for, e.g., Rackspace's hosted email service.


Which I use at my company and have nothing but praise for. But who is going to take an pseudononymous (if this isn't a word it should be) review into account.


I'd use google plus more if the mobile app wasn't a flaming turd.


plus.google.com is blocked at my employer.


Yeah, no shit! I’m not quite sure what is the point of that article, because it’s fairly obvious that the main reason for which Plus was conceived is to be the uniform identity provider for commenting, reviewing, and overall communicating throughout Google’s services.

At the time Google lacked the pictured user profiles that every other app seemed to have and so Google Plus was born.

I think that the discrete social network is secondary and the competition with Facebook is constantly being overplayed by the media as the reason for this social play.

The author just seems oddly surprised that G+ is doing what it’s supposed to do.


>> At the time Google lacked the pictured user profiles that every other app seemed to have

Yep, outside of Youtube avatars, full-blown Orkut profiles, profiles and pictures used inside GTalk, and Blogger profiles there was barely anything.


The fact that he specifically talks about Google's Google+ never crossed your mind, right?


Google+ is a social network. The only person who thinks otherwise is you:

http://plus.google.com

And the reason Google+ is being integrated everywhere is because it is the only way they see themselves gaining traction against Facebook. Which right now is their primary online competitor for the almighty advertising dollar.


I strongly disagree. Google made their strategy very clear on day one with their choice of name for this new endeavor: Google+. The "augmented" version of Google as a whole.

The discrete social network is definitely only a small cog in a much bigger machine, but debating whether it is a side effect or an intentional strategy is missing the point.


Google+ is an information-gathering service for Google's ad networks, disguised as a social network; that's why it's being integrated everywhere. Eyeballs are kinda secondary...


Every time someone bitched about their "real names only"* policy, G+'s defenders would insist that Google doesn't see it as a social network, but as an identity service.

*as long as your name sounds like something normal for the US


> Google+ is a social network. The only person who thinks otherwise is you:

Vic Gundotra disagrees.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/10/vic-gundotra-google...

http://mashable.com/2012/06/29/google-plus-problem/


> Vic Gundotra disagrees.

After Google+ failed as a social network, despite Google using all their Google-muscle to shove it down everyone's throats, Vic Gundotra claims it's not a social network.

This is more about not admitting complete and utter defeat than anything else.

If Google+ is not a social network, why do I keep getting a million emails about people wanting to share stuff with me, hooking up with people, getting requested to add people "I may know" and a red notification-icon with "my notifications" in the top left screen of everything Google, despite me having opted out, requested my profile be deleted and disabled Google+ for my gapps domain?

Why does Google+ act as the desperate kid who is constantly trying to talk to you and be social all the time, if its not a social network?

If it was merely a profile-service, why would it constantly need to pester me, even after I've told it to go away a million times?

Google+ is easily the worst product Google has ever launched and has seriously damaged my impression of the company as a company just launching good services you can opt in to use, not the Microsoft which attempts to shove everything down your throat. Google Wave was a massive flop, but it was a flop you didn't have to use. And it didn't affect you. Google+ is different.

Make no mistake about it: Google+ is very, very bad. Bad execution. Bad product. And bad for Google's image as a whole.


> After Google+ failed as a social network, despite Google using all their Google-muscle to shove it down everyone's throats, Vic Gundotra claims it's not a social network.

Please give me a date that it failed as a social network, and a listing of "all the Google-muscle" shoving it down everyone's throats prior to that date. If you are correct, surely you can prove it?

> If it was merely a profile-service

I didn't say it was merely a profile-service. Neither did Gundotra. It's an integration package. You keep saying it's a product when it's not a product.

> Google Wave was a massive flop, but it was a flop you didn't have to use. And it didn't affect you.

Your objection to Google+ seems to be that it's successful, rather than it's a failure. The problem is that it's not quarantined away from your notice: that they managed to justify moving to phase two where they started actually using it.

You just don't want it to succeed.


Shorter Vic G: "You can't separate it from the operating system!"


This will probably be the first time I've upvoted one of your comments, but I have to admit that this one was right on.


Well Vic better update the website then. Because a site that mentions "share the right things with the right people" and then has games, photos, events and videos sure sounds pretty similar to Facebook to me.

You don't think he's just trying to move the goalpost to prevent one-to-one comparisons with Facebook since you know they aren't doing so well ?


I'm not going to argue that Google+ doesn't fit some definition of "social network". But what's up with the snarky comments? How about sticking to an argument, instead of making comments like "The only person who thinks otherwise is you", which isn't even true?


> You don't think he's just trying to move the goalpost to prevent one-to-one comparisons with Facebook since you know they aren't doing so well ?

Let's say you're utterly correct and G+ is nothing more than a Facebook clone.

Let's say you're utterly correct and G+ is doing really badly.

As a businessperson, what's the correct response?


It's really depressing to see the "Don't be Evil" company get down in the mud because they're afraid of some fly-by-night swindlers who nobody will remember in five years.

I'm not giving you my name and face, Google, no matter how much I used to love you.


>"some fly-by-night swindlers who nobody will remember in five years"

People have been saying this for the last 5 years.

I think it's time to reiterate a point that was made here a couple days ago that I think really outlines the reason that Facebook WILL be around for a while.

The comment that I'm referring to suggested that there's a "point-of-no-return" for a service where people are too deeply invested in it for any competing service to have a REAL fighting chance. That point of no return is when you have grandmas and grandpas, as well as little kids, and non-tech-savvy folks in general using the service (in this case FB) consistently and constantly.

To give you a personal example, my parents are the LAST people who I would expect to create a Facebook account. They are very technically unsavvy, but on top of that they're pretty skeptical people too. However, they finally got a Facebook account, and I think that highlights why Facebook WILL be around for many more years.

If you're going to use Myspace as an example, then don't, because Myspace NEVER reached the tipping point of Grandmas and Grandpas trying to use it. I think this goes for any service, not just a social network like Facebook. Take the iPhone and iPad for example. Same thing with that. You have grandmas, grandpas, and little children using iOS, so you know it's ingrained across multiple generations.

Now I'm not saying I'm 100% sure they're a rock-solid company, but I don't think people give them enough credit. It's far more popular to say "oh they'll be gone in a few years" than to actually understand and analyze the situation.


Phooey, Facebook is at this point just a big Lebron James charging down the court and intimidating everybody in it's way. People will leave as soon as it's convenient because they viscerally hate it.

The Onion told me so: http://www.theonion.com/articles/number-of-users-who-actuall...


HAHA! I love the Onion and that article was actually pretty well written, loved the twist at the end.

Those 4 people represent the reasons that I actually like FB. I really just like seeing what other people are up to in their lives as well as staying in touch with the people who are closest to me day-to-day. It's really that simple.

NOT to suggest that FB doesn't have it's issues or that we should take any pressure off the company, but at the end of the day, most of the little issues are easy to ignore, and it just becomes a useful tool that I like using.


> because they're afraid of some fly-by-night swindlers who nobody will remember in five years.

Fun fact: I said Facebook would be dead by 2006.

I feel a little obligated, at this point, to admit I was wrong.


Early Facebook did die, though. Facebook today is utterly different from the quasi-private social space for college kids that it used to be. They pivoted from an exciting fad to a boring but pervasive network that wants to handle all your communication.




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