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

Google’s Google+ strategy: Evil, but still working

Add as a preferred source on Google
google plus hangout nfl sports football
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Remember when Google started forcing its users to create Google+ profiles? Last year, Google implemented a feature requiring users who signed up for new Google accounts — Gmail, YouTube, Google Wallet, and others — to automatically create Google+ profiles, regardless of if they wanted one or not. The move, at the time, smacked of hypocrisy, sparking discussions of Google finally, if somewhat unsurprisingly, closing the book on Don’t Be Evil, as it seemed Google had sacrificed its ethos for the sake of ads and competing with a perhaps greater evil in Facebook.

But Google can still pat itself on the back. While the move has caused contention among users and even within Google’s own rank-and-file, it appears to be working, increasing engagement with G+ in a way that Facebook may actually start worrying about.

Recommended Videos

According to the Wall Street Journal, integration across Google’s services into Google+ has resulted in 235 million people using Google+ features as of last month, up from 150 million last June. That correlates with increased click-through rates on brands Google+ Pages, ranging between two percent and 15 percent.

And Google executives promise that more integration is coming, as Google slowly but surely redefines its product around its social network, all in the hope of pulling people away from Facebook.

Google competes directly with Facebook for ad dollars based on how users interact with content on their sites. While Google makes $40 billion annually based on advertising across their myriad services and platforms, Facebook is better equipped to direct ads at individuals based on their personal activities, tying those habits to their real names. While Google’s Senior Vice President of Engineering and Google+ head Vic Gundotra has in the past assured users that Google doesn’t intend on using people’s real names to craft advertising, linking search habits, restaurant recommendations, and +1s better enables the company to direct people to products they may like.

This, of course, should surprise no one, as Google’s app ecosystem is quickly becoming ubiquitous. One thing, however, is certain: Google has no intention of changing course now, especially when it means positive growth for their social network.

Kwame Opam
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kwame graduated from Stony Brook University with BA in Anthropology and has a Masters in Media Studies. He's done stints at…
YouTube is giving creators a new weapon against AI deepfakes
Phone in hand showing YouTube logo

AI-generated videos are getting so realistic now that spotting a fake version of someone online is becoming harder by the week. And for creators, that opens up a pretty uncomfortable problem: what happens when your face starts appearing in videos you never made? YouTube seems to be taking that concern seriously.

The platform is now expanding its AI likeness detection system to a much larger group of creators, giving eligible users new tools to track and report videos that digitally imitate them using artificial intelligence. The feature was previously limited to a smaller pilot group within the YouTube Partner Program, but YouTube says it will begin rolling it out to all eligible creators over 18 in the coming weeks.

Read more
Spotted a mistake on your Instagram Story? You can finally edit it after posting
Instagram's new Edit Story feature means no more deleting and starting over.
instagram-story-edit-feature

We have all posted an Instagram Story with a typo and had no choice but to delete the whole thing and start over. Those days may be finally be behind you.

Instagram is finally rolling out the ability to edit a Story after it has already been posted. It seems to be a limited rollout for now. Social media consultant Matt Navarra was among the first to flag it on X.

Read more
Meta is testing an AI bot to unleash the same online stupidity that is AskGrok on X
Threads is getting its own version of AskGrok, and it is already controversial.
meta-ai-chatbot-threads

If you have ever been on X and watched someone tag Grok under a viral post asking "is this real???" – congratulations, Threads is about to give you the exact same experience.

Meta is testing a new feature that gives its AI chatbot a dedicated Threads account, @meta.ai, that users can tag directly inside posts and replies. The bot will then respond publicly with added context, recommendations, or information on whatever is being discussed.

Read more