Google’s Answer to the Facebook “Like” Button: The “+1”
Posted by
ADMIN on Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Filed Under: company, Google, Google Labs, Google Profile, number, Starting Wednesday, technology
Filed Under: company, Google, Google Labs, Google Profile, number, Starting Wednesday, technology
Google is making a big new push into social with a feature called “+1” that is similar in purpose to the Facebook “Like” button, but integrated directly into the world’s biggest search engine.
Starting Wednesday, users that opt into the +1 button experiment (and soon everyone else) in Google Labs will start seeing a +1 icon next to each link in Google search results.
Google defines this action as a “public stamp of approval,” and it is exactly that. When you +1 something, your name becomes associated with that link “in search, on ads, and across the web,” according to the company. It also shows up in a feed on your Google Profile, which is required to use the product.
The move builds on a number of social features that Google introduced in search earlier this year, such as the ability to see which friends have tweeted a given link in search results. Today’s move, however, is clearly something much bigger.
Beyond showing up in search results, Google plans to offer a +1 button to publishers that lets readers +1 something without leaving the publisher’s site. Facebook has a big head start here with its Like button — some two million sites and counting have it installed — but Google’s button will instantly have a lot of appeal, given the company says +1 data will directly influence its market share dominating search rankings. Similarly, we have to imagine that +1 is more bad news for content farms, whose content is less likely to be shared.
In another twist, users will also be able to +1 ads, as the company explains on the AdWords blog The video below explains +1 in more detail; we’ll have further analysis on Mashable later today.
Related Posts: company,
Google,
Google Labs,
Google Profile,
number,
Starting Wednesday,
technology
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment