Posts Tagged Google

Lessons from Path and Pinterest: Tell users everything

Posted by on Wednesday, 8 February, 2012

Path and Pinterest are probably two of the hottest social services right now, racking up millions of users and generating an ocean of favorable coverage. But both have gotten tripped up by the same thing that has made the social web a minefield for both Facebook and Google: namely, decisions that put their interests ahead of their users, and a lack of disclosure about what was going on behind the scenes or under the hood of their services. Will these missteps spell doom for either company? Probably not. But the backlash is a welcome reminder that for social apps, the trust of users is not something to be toyed with.

Path, a mobile photo-sharing app that expanded to become a full-fledged mobile social app when it relaunched a couple of months ago, was co-founded and is run by Dave Morin, an early Facebook staffer. You might think that the privacy blowups the giant social network has experienced over the past couple of years would make Path pretty sensitive to handling user data properly, but that doesn’t seem to be the case: earlier this week, controversy erupted when it was revealed that Path was uploading all of its users’ contacts to the company’s servers, something that many users have taken as a breach of their privacy.

It may not seem like a big deal, but you should still disclose it

In public comments on the blog post that first brought this to light, Morin apologized and said that Path will fix the problem in an upcoming version, by requiring users to explicitly opt-in — and he also tried to defend the company’s behavior by saying that it is the “industry best practice.” As a commenter on the Hacker News thread about the issue put it, however, a better phrase might be “industry lowest common denominator.”

It’s true that other apps and services also do this, including WhatsApp, Beluga, Hipster and others, and the ability to do so has been a part of Apple’s iOS since 2008. Others have also noted in Path’s defence that Apple allows apps to upload contacts without explicitly asking users for permission — something that it doesn’t do for other data such as a user’s location. And it’s also true that importing a user’s address book makes it a lot easier to scan for friends who are already on Path, and that this can be a benefit for users in the long run.

That said, however, the anger and shock that Path’s move seems to have triggered among many users — some of whom say they have deleted the app and will never return — makes it pretty clear that even if this behavior has benefits for users, the lack of disclosure about what Path was planning to do is a deal-breaker for many.

Pinterest, meanwhile, did something completely different to upset some of its users, but the underlying lesson is the same: the company — which says it has built up a massive user base of more than 10 million in just two months — is a content-sharing service where fans of different products and websites can post (or “pin”) their favorites. Since popular posts can drive a lot of traffic to websites that sell these products, Pinterest has been adding affiliate links that generate revenue for the site when users click on them.

Lesson: Never take your users for granted

As many of the company’s defenders have pointed out, this behavior makes a huge amount of sense for Pinterest, since it is providing a free service and needs to generate revenue somehow. But as with Path’s move — which also makes a lot of sense from a purely utilitarian point of view — Pinterest failed to disclose what it was doing to users, or at least failed to make it obvious. Perhaps the company thought (as Path likely did) that users wouldn’t mind. But it turns out that plenty of them do mind.

Path’s decision seems the more surprising of the two, if only because there are so many examples of similar undisclosed or opt-in-by-default moves that have triggered a huge amount of backlash, and not just for Facebook but for Google as well. The search giant’s engineers also clearly thought that merging people’s email contact lists with their new Buzz service was a great idea — after all, it was the most efficient way to populate a user’s follow list. But many users disagreed, and so did the federal government, and the resulting backlash arguably helped kill Google’s first attempt at a real social service.

The lesson here is that for social apps, the trust of users is paramount, and the best way to maintain that trust is to be as open as possible about everything that is occurring, particularly if it involves a user’s personal data. Whatever you’re doing with it may not seem like a big deal to you, but better to be open about it than have it revealed by someone else — at which point you look sneaky. As Craigslist founder Craig Newmark has put it, “trust is the new black,” and it never goes out of style.

Post and thumbnail photos courtesy of Flickr users Lars Plougmann and Christian Ditatompel

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Greenpeace Hates Big Tech, But Wants To Kill Google Least

Posted by on Wednesday, 8 February, 2012

Greenpeace looks down on the tech giants of the world. But it looks down on Google the least. On Tuesday, the big-name environmental-rights outfit unveiled its annual ranking of the tech giants working hardest to combat climate change and shift their operations to renewable energy sources. It’s called the “Cool IT Leaderboard,” and this year’s leader is Google, which scores a mere 53 points out of 100. Cisco, last year’s leader, dropped to second, with 49 points.



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A Google-a-Day Puzzle for Feb. 8

Posted by on Wednesday, 8 February, 2012

Google’s daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.



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Google, Cisco top the list of the greenest IT companies

Posted by on Wednesday, 8 February, 2012

How do the heavy weights of the Internet and telecom stack up in terms of how green their technology, energy consumption and political advocacy are? On Tuesday night Greenpeace released its latest Cool IT leaderboard report, which ranks the world’s largest IT giants, and shows who’s making progress and who’s falling behind.

Greenpeace gave Google the top overall score (53 out of 100), while Cisco (49 out of 100), Ericsson (48 out of 100) and Fujitsu (48 out of 100) followed shortly behind. On the flipside of the top companies, were the stragglers, which included Oracle (10 out of 100) at the very bottom, and TCS (11 out of 100) and Telefonica (11 out of 100) at the second and third to last spots.

Greenpeace gives the most weight in its scores to companies for using their own technology to reduce the world’s green house emissions. For example, a networking company like Cisco develops smart grid technology which can save energy and reduce emissions. The second largest part of the Greenpeace score is made up by how well the company advocates publicly and politically for reducing emissions. Lastly, Greenpeace gives companies points for monitoring and managing their own company emissions footprint.

Google rose in the rankings from six overall in 2010 to number one this week. Last year Google invested close to a billion dollars into clean energy projects. Cisco lost its top spot in 2010 to Google this year.

IBM, which was 3rd in 2010, dropped to 9th overall this week. Greenpeace says that IBM fell across all three categories and obtained four penalty points in political advocacy for being a member of a trade association that is trying to block the EU’s greenhouse gas emissions reduction goals.

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A Google-a-Day Puzzle for Feb. 6

Posted by on Monday, 6 February, 2012

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Engadget Mobile Podcast 124 – 02.05.2012

Posted by on Sunday, 5 February, 2012

There are Samsung phones, there are Motorola phones. There are BlackBerry Phones, there are Nokia phones. But you know what really gets us excited? KDDI phones with ten keys and heart of Japanese Gold. It’s the Engadget Mobile Podcast.

Hosts: Myriam Joire (tnkgrl), Brad Molen
Guests: Joseph Volpe, Dante Cesa
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Music: Tycho – Coastal Brake (Ghostly International)

00:00:59 – Galaxy Nexus and other CDMA devices removed from Google Support pages
00:03:58 – Motorola Droid RAZR Maxx review
00:20:36 – LG Spectrum review

00:29:55 – BLU Studio 5.3 and Touch Book 7.0 hands-on
00:35:30 – Distro Issue 26: Smartwatch face-off, Ryan Block and more
00:36:40 – Samsung Galaxy S III to get separate launch event ‘in the first half of 2012′
00:44:43 – Samsung Galaxy S Advance snapped in the wild, pricing in tow
00:45:25 – Is this the Samsung Galaxy S II Plus? Leaked benchmarks suggest new 1.5GHz dual-core Exynos processor
01:03:40 – BlackBerry London resurfaces in leak, sports matte black exterior, nonexistent OS
01:06:38 – Samsung Galaxy Note available at AT&T February 19th for 0, pre-orders begin February 5th
01:13:40 – Samsung Galaxy Note coming to Bell, Rogers and Telus in February

01:14:00 – Sprint Galaxy Nexus registration page gets served up by Google

01:18:45 – AT&T connected Galaxy Nexus, Nexus S get Android Market Google Wallet installs

01:22:48 – Windows Phone 8 detailed: dual cores, Skype Integration and NFC are a go

01:42:00 – Nokia Lumia 900 up for pre-order at Microsoft Store, down puts you in line
01:43:00 – Nokia teases February 8th for Symbian Belle update
01:44:37 – Google’s ‘Bouncer’ service scans the Android Market for malware, will judge you at the door
01:50:25 – HTC Ville gets hands-on en Francais, is presumably practicing its Spanish for MWC (video)
01:52:00 – KDDI’s INFOBAR C01 coming soon: ten keys and very Japanese (video)

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Engadget Mobile Podcast 124 – 02.05.2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Feb 2012 09:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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