Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Legacy Archives

Google’s +1 button adds features, becomes useful

Add as a preferred source on Google

Google+ button sharingWhat exactly do all those +1 buttons really do? Google first released the +1 button in June, and it quickly took the internet by storm. After using them for a little while people started to notice that clicking the button really didn’t do much of anything. Today Google has announced two new features that will not only make the +1 button more useful, but also give people a reason to click it.

The +1 button was so popular it even became more popular than Twitter’s Tweet button.  Nothing would really happen when you clicked the button, even after the launch of Google+ which was disappointing. You are able to find what pages your contact have clicked, but that information wasn’t too easy to find.  Pages that people would +1 would not show up on  your homepage, and thus almost defeated the purpose for a user to click the button in the first place.

Recommended Videos

Over the next week or so Google will be rolling out two changes to the +1 button that will greatly change how we interact with it. Most importantly when you click on the +1 button you will be given the option to share that page with your circles.  When clicked a drop down menu will appear and you will see a link to the page, picture, and a small blurb about the page.

The other feature is more tailored to web publishers, and it is called +snippets. When sharing pages with your circles the description of what you are sharing can be modified and changed. This will help publishers and users to help start conversations about stories being +1ed.

The two new features sound similar to how Facebook’s Like button works. When you click the button it allows you to share a story, include a picture, and add some text to the link. It is very nice to see these changes coming to the +1 button, even if they should have been included at the launch of the service.

Mike Dunn
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Mike graduated from University of Arizona with a degree in poetry, and made his big break by writing love sonnets to the…
YouTube is coming for celebrity deepfakes with new AI likeness detection tech
Celebrity deepfakes are in YouTube’s crosshairs with new AI detection tools
Phone in hand showing YouTube logo

YouTube is cracking down on celebrity deepfakes, and this time around, it is not just talking about the problem in vague platform-safety terms. In a new blog post, YouTube announced that it is expanding its likeness detection technology to the entertainment industry.

So now, the tools will be accessible to talent agencies and management companies for the celebrities they represent. This tool works in a way that is similar to Content ID, but rather than matching copyrighted media, it looks for AI-generated content using a person's likeness and gives eligible participants the ability to find that content and request removal.

Read more
Meta wants you to pay for WhatsApp now, and it’s already testing the waters
WhatsApp

WhatsApp has been free for over a decade, but Meta is starting to change that. The company is testing a paid subscription tier called WhatsApp Plus, and if you haven't heard about it yet, you probably will soon. The rollout was first spotted by WABetaInfo, and Meta's own Help Center page has since confirmed some of the details. 

So, what do you actually get?

Read more
Tinder wants to check your humanity by gazing into an orb. Yes, you read that right
Staring into an orb to prove you are human is no longer science fiction.
tinder-world-id-human-verification

Online dating is already a trust minefield, and now Tinder wants to add an eyeball scan to the mix. The popular dating app has announced a global partnership with World, the biometric identity company founded by OpenAI's Sam Altman. To prove you are a real human on Tinder, you will soon have the option to get your eyes scanned by a physical orb device.

What is World ID and how does Tinder's human verification work?

Read more