| Facebook yesterday announced it will be adding search functionality to the social network. The new Facebook Graph Search feature and functionality will roll out ever so slowly to a small set of users while the company continues to test and fine tune it. You can sign up to be on the waiting list of beta testers now. That's all good. What's Right With Facebook Search Meanwhile, you can look for not only posts, but also images. Double win. But those first two pieces are only a small part of the puzzle. Judging by the demos and announcement content, it seems Facebook really wants us to know how else we can use search to find out interesting information about people in our network and what they like. A Mix of Good and Bad First of all, I don't want someone else to tell me how a search tool should work or what I should be using it to find, and I got the sense that Zuck & Co. really wanted to impress upon us Facebook users the way they envisioned Graph Search working. I didn't like feeling as though I was being ordered to use it in a certain way, a way that will help Facebook monetize its search features. Granted, it's helpful to know what a tool can do, even if that's not what many people want to do with it. Better still, the official announcement was full of refrains about how Facebook would thoroughly test the new search tools and make changes based on use. All told, that's a mix of bad and good. Clearly, though, this is the angle from which Facebook Graph Search will be monetized. Many of the examples cited in the demo seemed to set Facebook up to compete with other recommendation sites, such as Yelp, Angieslist, and even online dating services. Facebook's search tools are not, in my mind, competing with Google in any way, shape, or form. Google's search primarily (although not exclusively by any means, and certainly not since Google connected all a user's Google accounts to inform search results, although that's another matter) looks at nearly everything on the Internet. Facebook and other recommendation sites only search their own networks and rely on users to contribute to the pool of information they keep—the database. No one uses the term "user-generated content" much anymore, but it's exclusively what powers Facebook from a content perspective. What's Wrong With Facebook Search Assumptions:
And let's dive into that third point just a little bit deeper. What My Friends Actually "Like":
The point here is what we "like" on Facebook is often not a clear and accurate representation of what we like. We "like" things because in the past, the concept of "liking" something on Facebook was for fun. (Too many Facebook users never understood that "liking" a fan page or business was feeding other business metrics, but that's beside the point for now.) And now, Facebook is changing the rules of what it means to "like" something. We've heard that before: Facebook changing the rules after its users have already participated in the matter at hand. I'm much less concerned about privacy issues in this instance. The new search feature claims it will only make information available to you if it's already been shared with you. And if you or your friends go around "liking" products and services, or telling Facebook where you live, and so forth—that's on you. If you care about privacy, you should remove that information from your profile and remove "likes" that might give the wrong impression about your identity. And be sure to do that now and over the next few weeks before the search feature rolls out in full. For more from Jill Duffy, follow her on Twitter @jilleduffy. via Technology - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNH2auB2Q6-XkygIHATSJqM7xyRUaQ&url=http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2414382,00.asp | |||
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Wednesday, 16 January 2013
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