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May 12, 2008 6:01 AM PDT

Google brings Friend Connect to the masses

Posted by Dan Farber
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Updated 3:15 PST May 12

As expected, Google has unveiled a preview of Friend Connect, a way to add social features to a Web site without programming.

David Glazer, director of engineering at Google, described Friend Connect, whose site is inaccessible Monday morning, as plumbing for the rest of the Web.

"The Web is getting better by getting more social. We've baked social features into the infrastructure of the Web, and it is not tied to any particular site," Glazer said. "Users can interact with any of their friends anywhere they go on Web, and with any app."

I asked Glazer if Friend Connect is a response to Facebook Connect and MySpace.com's Data Availability. "People will speculate a lot in that direction. We didn't create this code in the three days (since Facebook and MySpace made their announcements)."

Unlike Facebook and MySpace, Google lacks a dominant, centralized social-networking hub. Friend Connect works the edges of the Internet, applying an open and distributed approach, and bringing a social dimension to the 99-plus percent of sites that aren't socially enabled.

Guacamole is a sample site created by Google for demonstrating Friend Connect features.

(Credit: Google)

"The distributed model has worked well for the Web. That is what the Web does--many points of light loosely coupled and massively distributed, allowing users to connect to pages of information," Glazer told me. "Now it is working to connect people to other people."

Friend Connect-compliant sites will be able to view, invite, and interact with newfound friends, or with existing friends, from established social-networking sites, including Facebook, Google Talk, Hi5, Orkut, and Plaxo via secure authorization application-programming interfaces.

Currently only a few sample sites, including Google's Guacamole site, are available to end users. "We are looking to get feedback from Web site owners about what kinds of sites and apps they want," Glazer said. Ingrid Michaelson, an independent musician, integrates iLike's OpenSocial application with Friend Connect to connect friends without having to leave the site.

David Glazer, director of engineering, Google

(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET News.com)

John McCrea, vice president of marketing at Plaxo, said Google's Friend Connect is "flipping the model" from walled gardens (such as Facebook) to a more open social Web:

Instead of widgetizing apps and bolting them on to some corporation's proprietary social graph, why not widgetize the social graph and socially enable any Web site or Web page?

That's a big, bold vision that Plaxo is 100 percent aligned with. As to Facebook and MySpace, it is certainly great to read the rhetoric they are now putting forth. The meme of data portability, open social Web, and bill of rights for users of the social Web has certainly caught on!

Alas, the devil is in the details, and we haven't seen any details (yet) from Facebook--just a Friday blog post signaling intent. It might be great, and we hope it is, but it's not clear what the actual substance will be.

With regard to MySpace, the rhetoric is over-the-top goodness, including a declaration of the end of the era of walled gardens. Alas, the details, as they currently exist, for their "Data Availability" effort fall far short of the vision many of us share for users having ownership of their data, control over who can see it, and freedom to take it with them, wherever they go across the social Web.

In the MySpace "Data Availability" model, the user can take their data for a walk anytime they want or to any place they want, but the data remains on a tether. There is no notion of copy, move, or sync. Participating sites must agree to have MySpace serve the data live in their page. That's a half-step wrapped in a beautiful flag of openness.

Friend Connect provides a set of wizards for adding social features to Web sites without programming.

(Credit: Google)

"Friend Connect provides wizardlike pages. Webmasters just fill in the information, select social apps, copy code, paste, and save. No coding is required. It passes the 'easy' test, and it does something useful," Glazer said. It provides features such as user registration, invitations, member galleries, message posting, and reviews, as well as OpenSocial applications.

At the core of Friend Connect are three emerging social standards--OpenID, oAuth, and OpenSocial.

"Today is the right time to connect all emerging standards to give users the ability to go anywhere on Web and interact with any set of friends on any application," Glazer said.

Google's Social Graph API is not part of the Friend Connect preview, Glazer said. "The Social Graph API is part of the same conversation, but we didn't need to connect those two dots."

Friend Connect applies existing and emerging standards to provide plumbing for the social Web.

(Credit: Google)

Glazer emphasized that Google is focused on keeping users in control of their information. "The Webmaster has no business knowing who my friends are, but I can choose to link my login to my Facebook account and invite friends," he said. "It's up to each site to publish APIs, with appropriate terms of use," Glazer told me. "I would expect as Friend Connect matures in the market, we will see more people connecting to it and more standard interfaces to turn on and register for it. It's not fully standard now.

Friend Connect covers many of the use cases for the social Web, but a single, standard "friend" API is still lacking.

"There are a few good candidates, such as the OpenSocial RESTful APIs, which are at a rough consensus stage but not running code," Glazer said. "We don't know enough to call a winner, but there will be a standard."

Update: During a call with the press, Glazer called Friend Connect a "salt shaker full of social to sprinkle social features on a site in a matter of hours." However, the salt shaker is not getting passed around much. Google is being very cautious about approving sites to use the new code, with concerns about applications or sites that might violate user privacy. "We have to make sure we get it right," Glazer said, "especially when user data is involved." It also sounds like Google rushed this announcement to be in step with recent Facebook and MySpace data portability efforts.

Google is creating a wait list for requests to use Friend Connect, and expects to green light a few dozen sites in the next few days. Unleashing Friend Connect will be staged over the coming months, according to Joe Kraus, Google director of product management. "It's on the order of months, and certainly not six months, probably a couple," he said.

See also: Techmeme

Dan Farber is editor in chief of CNET News. He has more than 25 years of experience as an editor and journalist covering technology. E-mail Dan.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 17 comments
by factoryjoe May 12, 2008 7:11 AM PDT
That friend connect link is 404'ing... maybe you jumped the gun a bit?

Oh, and I think that it will less be the model of "copying" data between systems, and more the model of live streaming:

http://factoryjoe.com/blog/2008/05/11/thoughts-on-dataportability/

It's not really about vendor lock-in... if everyone is speaking the same protocols, lock-in is less of a problem, just as you can buy many different phones today that all operate on the same phone network.
Reply to this comment
by saintseminole May 12, 2008 7:29 AM PDT
The Friend Connect link in the story leads to a 404 error page. Guess it's not "unveiled" yet, is it? But when it is online, it's certainly something that a lot of folks will be interested in.
Reply to this comment
by 5errr May 12, 2008 7:44 AM PDT
i'm looking forward to seeing where they go with this.
Reply to this comment
by davemc500hats May 12, 2008 9:17 AM PDT
>>Unlike Facebook and MySpace, Google lacks a dominant, centralized social-networking hub

well actually, they do... it's calledGmail ;)
Reply to this comment
by ssjtrunks May 12, 2008 9:27 AM PDT
are you guys stupid or something? yah, the link is 404 dead, hence why the article states that the link is INaccessible Monday morning. ugh...
Reply to this comment
by Chris Brogan May 12, 2008 10:41 AM PDT
It's certainly an interesting move. Facilitate the throughput and own the scrubbed and depersonalized data. Imagine those gmail side ads of data being applied to our every social application interaction. Sure, it's scary, but it's also powerful.

Done well, Chris M is right, insofar as if we're all using roughly the same structures, it will play nicely. Done poorly, you get Passport2. I'm leaning towards more A than B, in this case, were I a betting man.

Great write up, Dan.
Reply to this comment
by Mr.Californian May 12, 2008 11:55 AM PDT
If you set up a Google Apps account, will you be able to use this now? I really want to try it out!
Reply to this comment
by viperpack2029 May 12, 2008 2:16 PM PDT
What about PWNED.COM? it's blowing up like crazy as the largest social network for Gamers
Reply to this comment
by viperpack2029 May 12, 2008 2:18 PM PDT
What about PWNED.COM? it's blowing up like crazy as the largest social network for Gamers
Reply to this comment
by burtonette May 12, 2008 4:58 PM PDT
Ok, now I want the rest of that guac recipe!!!

melinda.anderson@gmail.com
Reply to this comment
by dfarber May 12, 2008 9:16 PM PDT
Exactly Dave....just like Yahoo has YMail and plans to make it the hub of its social network dreams...
Reply to this comment
by jackdaniels08 May 12, 2008 10:57 PM PDT
Google Friend Connect link: http://www.google.com/friendconnect/
Reply to this comment
by sachendray May 13, 2008 11:22 PM PDT
I remember back in the portal days, there were services that allowed you to add portal tools like calendar, chat etc to your own website, and if I remember correctly it didn't become a rave.
This kinda seems similar. Or am I missing something?

Note that I'm talking about the "concept" of doing what you could do on a big website for your niche audience on your own site.
Reply to this comment
by WeCanDoBIZ May 14, 2008 8:47 AM PDT
For me this is great news as I run a UK-businessf focused social network and Friend Connect has the potential to allow our newest users to get up and seeing benefits a lot sooner, using existing profile and friend information.

I am struggling to see how Google is going to make money from this though. Remember that OpenSocial is a not for profit organisation.

Ian Hendry
WeCanDo.BIZ
http://www.wecando.biz
Reply to this comment
by ChrisLang September 28, 2008 4:28 AM PDT
Let's see if now that Friend Connect is going to roll out soon on Blogger I can clarify this. We have a little more information now.

First of all, Friend Connect is due out any day now with the Followers widget bringing it to Blogger. The Followers widget is Friend Connect, it just depends what code Google feeds it.

Next, when you join a Friend Connect site, it adds the RSS feed to your Google Reader.

Third Friend Connect is how you make friends in the new Google social network that ties Google Reader, Reader blog post sharing (bookmarking) and Gmail all together.

This is the perfect social network. Very hard to spam, unlike Digg, all the while providing very powerful positive indicators to Google.

How are they going to make money? Have you heard of AdSense for RSS feeds?

Feel free to track me down if you need more information. - Chris Lang
Reply to this comment
by alwleed1 October 3, 2008 1:35 AM PDT
For me this is great news as I run a UK-businessf focused social network and Friend Connect has the potential to allow our newest users to get up and seeing benefits a lot sooner, using existing profile and friend information.

I am struggling to see how Google is going to make money from this though. Remember that OpenSocial is a not for profit organisation.

Ian Hendry
WeCanDo.BIZ
http://forum.al-wlid.com
Reply to this comment
by alwleed1 October 3, 2008 1:36 AM PDT
For me this is great news as I run a UK-businessf focused social network and Friend Connect has the potential to allow our newest users to get up and seeing benefits a lot sooner, using existing profile and friend information.

I am struggling to see how Google is going to make money from this though. Remember that OpenSocial is a not for profit organisation.

Ian Hendry
WeCanDo.BIZ
http://www.al-wlid.com
Reply to this comment
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Dan Farber is the editor in chief of CNET News. He has covered technology for more than two decades, and he previously served as editor in chief of ZDNet, PC Week and MacWeek. Outside the Lines explores the intersection of business and technology.

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