Google is shutting down Google+ for consumers following security lapse - finally

https://archive.fo/CJWna

Google is going to shut down the consumer version of Google+ over the next 10 months, the company writes in a blog post today. The decision follows the revelation of a previously undisclosed security flaw that exposed users’ profile data that was remedied in March 2018.

Google says Google+ currently has “low usage and engagement” and that 90 percent of Google+ user sessions last less than five seconds. Still, the company plans to keep the service alive for enterprise customers who use it to facilitate conversation among co-workers. New features will be rolled out for that use case, the company says. Google is focusing on a “secure corporate social network,” which is odd considering this announcement comes alongside news that the company left profile details unprotected.

In addition to sunsetting Google+, the company announced new privacy adjustments for other Google service. API changes will limit developers’ access to data on Android devices and Gmail. Developers will no longer receive call log and SMS permissions on Android devices and contact interaction data won’t be available through the Android Contacts API. That same also API provided basic interaction data, like who you last messaged, and that permission is also being revoked.

As for the Gmail changes, the company is updating its User Data Policy for the consumer version of the email service. This will limit apps and the scope of their access to user data. Ben Smith, Google fellow and VP of engineering, writes: “Only apps directly enhancing email functionality — such as email clients, email backup services and productivity services (e.g., CRM and mail merge services) — will be authorized to access this data.”

Any developer who has this access will be have to undergo security assessments and agree to new rules about data handling, like not transferring or selling user data for targeting ads, market research, email campaign tracking, or other unrelated purposes.

Google previously tried to quell privacy concerns earlier this year after The Wall Street Journal detailed how common it is for third-party app developers to be able to read and analyze users’ Gmail messages. At the time, Suzanne Frey, the director of the company’s security, trust, & privacy division of Google Cloud, emphasized that users should review what apps have access to their accounts and revoke it if necessary. Last year, Google announced that it would stop its long-standing practice of scanning the contents of individual Gmail users for advertising purposes. Of course, the company still has plenty of data it can target advertisements against, like Search history, YouTube views, and other Chrome actions.

These most recent changes are being attributed to an internal Google effort called Project Strobe, which involved a review of “third-party developer access to Google account and Android device data and of our philosophy around apps’ data access,” according to Google.
 
Maybe if Google actually integrated social media functions into Youtube themselves such as

  • being able to post audio only posts like bandcamp or soundcloud or text and picture posts
  • being able to see what videos your friends are watching
  • a proper IM system built into Youtube
  • videos having more ratings than like and dislike like Facebook
  • being able to post video replys again
  • dedicated Discord/IRC chatrooms for certain topics and channels
They would be able to make Youtube more than the place that hosts videos
1) That would be great, after all the YT Music app has an "audio only" option already.
2) No, oh God no, noooooooo. I don't want my "friends" know what I watch. Be it Metokur, 24/7 lo fi hip hop, peppy pig, et al.
3) Might be nice if its like IRC/old AIM with the chatrooms and then individual conversations.
4) Videos used to have ratings (out of 5 stores) until they moved to like/dislike system (Man....for people who claim to hate "binary" so much they love rating binaries...)
5) Ehhh it was a cancer that brought us proto twitch boob streams (reply girls)
6) see 3.

But this is Google, they seem to half ass a lot for the past 10 years unless it makes it big right off the bat.
 
The only people I've ever seen use Google+ were either 10 year olds and/or autists. I think Google was in denial about it being a failure for a long time.
I can just see the shitposting on 4chan:
"You're reddit"
"Oh yeah? Well you're Google+ : dead, maggot"
 
Just for fun a few weeks ago I checked up on my Google+ page, and the last bit of activity was in 2009.

I love when companies try so hard to be "the next big thing" and fail miserably.
 
this reminds me when google+ was forced into youtube
You can literally just show the likes and dislikes to the side like before. It doesn't have to do anything else. I just want to be able to passively tell people to fuck off. (:_(
how about dislikes actually doing something?
first, they hid the dislike ratings for comments, then they changed the colours for the dislike ratio from red to grey, because I guess showing dislikes hurts feelings.
 
I think the biggest problem with Google+ was that it didn't grow organically. Google practically forced it upon their consumers, and in doing so they engineered for themselves an artificially high user base who didn't know or care enough about their site to give it any proper engagement.

The result speaks for itself.

Google+ was essentially the social media equivalent of a ghost town. It had all the features in place to draw people in; it just lacked the one draw that mattered the most: a community spirit.
 
Only thing it was ever good for was gro
Maybe if Google actually integrated social media functions into Youtube themselves such as

  • being able to post audio only posts like bandcamp or soundcloud or text and picture posts
  • being able to see what videos your friends are watching
  • a proper IM system built into Youtube
  • videos having more ratings than like and dislike like Facebook
  • being able to post video replys again
  • dedicated Discord/IRC chatrooms for certain topics and channels
They would be able to make Youtube more than the place that hosts videos

The only thing I found Google+ useful for was sharing music playlists...from Youtube.

Google+ was essentially the social media equivalent of a ghost town. It had all the features in place to draw people in; it just lacked the one draw that mattered the most: a community spirit.

The UI is really bad. Didn't help.
 
I think the biggest problem with Google+ was that it didn't grow organically. Google practically forced it upon their consumers, and in doing so they engineered for themselves an artificially high user base who didn't know or care enough about their site to give it any proper engagement.
Might be a weird comparison, but it's the same reason no one makes Mickey Mouse memes: he's so much of a forced icon that there's no organic community off him. You need to plant your shit properly and take your time to get the best product customers will love.
 
Might be a weird comparison, but it's the same reason no one makes Mickey Mouse memes: he's so much of a forced icon that there's no organic community off him.
Well, that and there's this giant corporation that will hound you to the ends of the Earth if you try.
 
Google continues to expand the graveyard of failed products, considering their golden goose was crafted before the company went big I wonder what the hell Google has their massive development staff for, that hive of troondom and champagne socialists has done nothing but suck in a paycheck while producing unsustainable garbage
Google Docs/Sheets is a great set of products. Admittedly, that's a 10+ year old product that was just putting openoffice online. Adding Forms integration was something they did recently that didn't fuck anything up.

YouTube literally already does this.
It literally does not. I regularly see top comment that has 1/3 the likes of the ones below it. It won't be pinned. It won't be somebody I know on youtube. It will just be some random comment youtube thought was better than the rest.
 
So how will people use the services they were forced to get a google+ account if they pull the plug?
 
Maybe if Google actually integrated social media functions into Youtube themselves such as
  • being able to post video replys again
I miss this feature. It was great for seeing speds argue back and fourth. (Live streams are reactionary, but IMO it's funnier when they have time to think about it and still fail)
 
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