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Google no longer to promote Google+ as Facebook rival
New York, July 28
Google will no longer be promoting its ambitious Google+ as competition to Facebook and Twitter, media reports said.
Google+
head Brad Horowitz on Monday said users would no longer need a Google+
account to engage with others on Google products. Instead, any Google
email or account will do, Wall Street Journal reported.
Google
launched Google+ four years ago, seeking to create a big social network
with a billion or more people updating their status, posting photos and
keeping in touch with friends, family and colleagues.
"The
company wanted it to be a 'platform layer' that unified Google's sharing
models, as well as a product and a mobile app," Horowitz said in a
Google+ update.
"This was a well-intentioned goal, but as
realised it led to some product experiences that users sometimes found
confusing," he wrote.
Among the most confusing was a requirement
that a user have a Google+ account and profile to log into many other
Google services.
Horowitz said Google+ will focus on connecting
users around specific interests. He said his team is now called SPS,
which stands for Streams, Photos and Sharing.
Other things people
often share on social networks, like their location, are being moved to
other Google apps like the messaging and video-chat service Hangouts,
Google said.
"In the coming months, a Google account will be all
you'll need to share content, communicate with contacts, create a
YouTube channel and more, all across Google," the company was reported
as saying.