Google Friend Connect - part 2: The largest Social Network ever built
Having originally assumed that the reason Facebook, Hi5 and LinkedIn (FHL), amongst others, were involved in the Google Friend Connect (GFC) service, I initially wanted to write this post to argue that this was the biggest strategic mistake of their lives. Turns out, Google is involving them whether they like it or not - using their APIs to let you pull in your friend data to your Google Friend Connect profile from your other social networks.
In light of this, the point I’ll argue is therefore that not slamming the door on GFC’s scraping of their data would be a fatal mistake for FHL. Needless to say, deprived of their data, GFC loses all its value to users - so this is a zero-sum game.
I argued yesterday that all FHL could possibly gain from this is more information about you as you browse around the web and use social features on various websites. That’s an interesting datapoint (which they may not even have access to because they’re unwilling participants in this scheme), but long term, being part of GFC means their sites will be abandoned as Google rolls out the biggest social network mankind has ever seen, building on the sum of FHL’s networks, and more besides.
To see where I’m coming from, you have to understand the next strategic plays that I see Google potentially making with its GFC service. Indulge me in the following thought exercise:
- GFC starts improving your GFC profile, which others can see if they’re connected to you on Facebook, Hi5 or LinkedIn (FHL) - shut out if not (i.e. privacy maintained)
- GFC enables you to search for the GFC profiles of people you are connected to on FHL
- GFC lets you add other sources of your social network - such as your contacts in Gmail, Google Talk, etc. Email is a vast social network that as yet doesn’t have any social infrastructure around it (aside from tools like Xobni) - but imagine email networks being integrated into GFC
- GFC lets you add Google OpenSocial apps to your GFC page - oh I dunno, say for example… a SuperPoke widget, a FunWall app, a Minifeed widget, a photo album gallery… does your GFC profile page now start to remind you of somewhere else?
- The result? A GFC service where the profile pages are just as interactive and feature-filled as Facebook (i.e. of equal feature-derived value), where you can follow the activity of, and interact with (once they sign up to GFC) all your friends from Facebook, Hi5, LinkedIn, all the sites you use GFC features on, and all your Gmail contacts - you can ‘friend’ people just by adding them on Gmail and having them reciprocate the connection (hence Gmail becomes the social connector system instead of friending people on FHL)
Boom, there goes the neighbourhood, Facebook! Sorry, FriendFeed! Bye, LinkedIn, nice knowing you! Hi5, let’s face it, it’s about damn time you were abandoned. Google just built a meta-socnet. Don’t let your employees fight to be the one that gets to turn off the lights at your spanking new offices and costly datacentres.
Related:
- Google Friend Connect - part I: it’s about the data
- This week, Google announced a new tool to help me and all other website owners create social features in our sites. It's a library of javascript gadgets that I link to (in the Google library) from my site, and loads up in the site (imagine it instead of the Disqus comments system I currently have installed) to add features for visitors which they can use by signing in - like comments, a chatroom, a photo gallery for people to upload photos to, product reviews, whatever. Blogopunditry and civil rights hippies are pleased that you can log in with a google account, or OpenID, AIM, Yahoo, maybe others in future - so this isn't a straight-up move to get people to sign up Google Accounts. No, it's far more clever than that. According to their demo video, once you have a Google Friend Connect (GFC) account (having logged in with yahoo, google, openID, whatever), you can tell it who all your friends are - you simply link to your Facebook, Hi5, Orkut and/or LinkedIn social networks and it sucks that information out. For you, that's cool, because when you use the chatroom on my site, it will tell you which of...
- The Fred Wilson effect (a.k.a: social networking dividend of an open, public conversation)
- Last week made my head spin. As I continue with my biochemistry degree, I spectate the new media sphere as it twists and turns; I occasionally pass comment on it, either on this blog, on twitter, or in some other forum, for example, the comments sections of other sites. I happened to leave a couple of comments on Fred Wilson's blog, a high profile venture capitalist based in New York primarily investing in young US-based dotcoms. The comments, innocuous though I thought they were, must have caught his eye. He highlighted one, then the other, on his blog - both to give them some exposure because they echoed his own view or provided some new insight, and the second time round, to provide a case study in how social networking is evolving as we find new ways of having adult, mature conversations, in the open where anyone can learn from and join in. Twitter and blog comments are just two venues for open conversation, and open conversation and open social networking is headed somewhere BIG (the topic for a future blog post). The purpose of this post is to continue Fred's case study with hard data. Here are three graphs...
- About
- This is the personal dumping ground of Philippe Bradley, a French+English 21yr/old student at Oxford University (currently finishing up my 4-year MSc Molecular & Cellular Biochemistry). Looking for something to do, summer '08 onwards. To save you the Google, here's my consolidated web presence, or follow these direct links to some of the (all too many) places I'm @: To get in touch, I can be reached at philbradley@gmail.com , or on Twitter at @flipbrad PDJB: Talking nonce sense since 1986...
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