Tag Archives: skype

5 Reasons Google+ May Not Be Huge Facebook Threat After All

Google’s newest social media platform, Google+, is the fastest growing social media site in history, which may have many people at Facebook and Twitter worried. However, there are several reasons why Google+ may not replace Facebook as the go-to social media site. Here are a few:

1. Usability

The overall layout of Google+ is similar to that of Facebook, but the subtle differences are going to be problematic in a world where you have the user’s attention for a whopping five seconds. If they can’t find what they’re looking for, they’re gone. The bottom line is people are used to Facebook, and may not want to spend the extra time trying to figure out the in’s and out’s of Google+.

2. Verbiage

Everyone knows what it means to “like” something. However, when you think of the phrase “plus one” you probably think of being allowed to bring a date to a wedding or work function, not of being a fan of or enjoying an activity, song, etc.

+1 works a lot like the Facebook “like” button, but for some this might be a tough concept to grasp. People like what they know and from the outset, the idea of +1 as a rating of support has been a point of head scratching and mild snickering. This additional lack of intuitive use is another point against Google in the battle for users’ hearts and minds.

3. Usefulness

Google+ has some awesome features. My personal favorite is Circles.  That one may want to share something publicly but differently is a concept well grasped by Google.

The friends I went to the pub with and listened to the song I completely “plus one” are different than my co-workers. And goodness knows my SEO friends are different than anyone else I know.

Google created Circles to allow the easy filtering of messages by grouping friends and the easy sharing of images, status updates, etc. to and from these same groups. It’s a great idea.

Unfortunately, my dad doesn’t have this problem, nor does my sister, nor does my grandmother; in fact, about 80 percent of the people I know are OK with one level of sharing. And if it is a bit of a bother to them, it’s less of a bother to put on the personal filter every now and then than to try to adopt yet another communications medium.

Sure, we geeks love new toys and we like to try new things, so we were happy to create a new account, figure out how to use it, play around in the settings, upload our photos again, etc. But how many of your relatives would?

4. Purpose

Sometimes the simple question needs to be asked (and every 2-year-old knows it): Why?

We know why Google wants the project to be successful. If Google+ became even half as successful as Facebook, the information on relationships they could collect and what that could mean to them as far as feeding advertising in our direction more accurately would be incredible. But we’re not Google.

Oh sure, we’ll play around with Google+, but if your non-tech friends and family don’t adopt it, it’ll likely become that thing you check every blue moon when you remember it’s there.

The problem Google is up against is that Facebook really isn’t bad. Plus, it’s already got virtually everyone you likely know signed up, connected, profiles built, comments, and history. Why would anyone give that up when there isn’t a problem? So you can drop people in Circles as you attempt to rebuild your full friends list and convince your parents to join Google+?

And for those of you thinking, why not use both, I would ask … why? Do we really want to waste more time updating our statuses – now on multiple websites? Tagging photos, chatting with friends, etc.? I think not.

5. Convenience

I touched on it before, but it’s a core issue with Google+ that’s worth discussing on its own. Using Google+ is not convenient.

I, like many, am busy. The number of draws on my time increases almost daily, many of these draws from the online world. I’ve got Facebook, Twitter, Skype, AIM, MSN, forums, a blog, email, the phone and (here comes the shocker) live human interaction. Why on Earth would I want another?

The single biggest problem that Google may be up against right now is that they’re fighting a battle from behind. While I anticipate very solid growth early on, once users realize that many of their friends haven’t moved over, rather than have to access yet another social media resource to communicate, they’ll slowly move back to just the one. The one where all their friends and contacts already are, where they can communicate in one location: Facebook.

Conclusion:

Will Google+ die? Maybe not. It’s possible the folks at Google will adapt and focus it more against LinkedIn than Facebook; that battle they could win, as it’s the same audience.

But Google+ is not set to become the Facebook killer it’s hyped to be. It just doesn’t solve any problems worth solving for the majority of people.

Article courtesy of Search Engine Watch.

Kill Your Online ID Via ‘Cyber Suicide’

People have been fired for what they post on social networking sites. Some college students said their Facebook and MySpace pages have cost them job offers.

How can you get rid of the virtual path you have made of yourself? Commit “cyber suicide.”

Suicidemachine.org is a one-stop site where you can wipe out all your mistakes, all your profiles and virtually disappear in cyberspace.

In a Skype interview, the founders of Suicide Machine, Walter Langelaar and Gordan Savicic, explained how it works.

“The machine logs into your account, changes your profile picture, changes your passwords and then goes into the friends, your tweets, your contact information and starts deleting everything,” they said.

This could take 10 hours per site if you did it on your own. Some sites may still store and own your images and data. Suicide Machine is supposed to totally wipe out your account in less than an hour.

“The funny thing is you get to watch it on your own computer. You can watch your whole profile being emptied,” the Austria-based founders said. “Everything goes into the trash can, we don’t store anything from those profiles. We don’t store information. We’re just using the removal tools available.”

Facebook has noticed and is not happy tools like Suicide Machine can wipe out their system. Facebook served Suicide Machine with a cease and desist order and also blocked the IP address at one point.

For now, Suicide Machine has rerouted traffic, wiping out Facebook profiles once again.

The site gets about 25,000 visitors a day and only about 10 percent are able to commit “cyber suicide” on their first try.

More than 2,000 people have pulled the plug successfully. Nearly 200,000 friends have been “unfriended” and more than 300,000 tweets have been removed since the site launched seven weeks ago.