Google+ becomes the second most popular social network behind Facebook

Move over Twitter, because according to Trendstream’s Global Web Index for Q4 2012, Google+ has managed to move into the second-place spot for social platforms. This puts it behind Facebook (although by a significant amount of users), with YouTube also managing to top Twitter. Now Twitter is in fourth place in terms of total active users, at least according to Trendstream’s collected data.

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That data estimates Facebook’s active user count was at 693 million at the end of 2012. Compare that the estimatated 343 million Google+ users at the end of the year, and it’s easy to see that Google+ has quite a bit of catching up to do. Still, that was enough to move Google+ in front of Twitter, with YouTube following closely behind.

As Forbes points out, it’s important to remember that these are active user counts – meaning this doesn’t represent total users – and that it doesn’t take much to make one an active user, especially with the number of services and other websites tied to these social networks in one way or another. Take YouTube, for instance – if Google were to link YouTube with Google+, it could make the number of active Google+ members skyrocket.

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In any case, don’t expect numbers to start falling anytime soon, as we’re seeing Google, Facebook, and Twitter do more and more to integrate their social platforms with our lives each and every day. Google+ has a lot of ground to make up in its battle against Facebook, but it’s far from dead like some on the Internet would have you believe. Stay tuned, because this shows that the battle of the social networks is heating up, and in the meantime, be sure to check out SlashGear’s own Google+ page.

[via Android Community]


Google+ becomes the second most popular social network behind Facebook is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Vine arrives: 6s video sharing for Twitter and Facebook

Twitter has launched Vine, a video sharing service that echoes the brevity of the 140-character limit by only allowing users to share up to six seconds of looping footage. Vine, launching initially on iPhone and iPod touch, is a free download, and is the result of an acquisition by Twitter of the Vine team. Basically, think adding movement and audio to your usual tweet brevity, for those times when actions speak louder than words.

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“Although we’ve joined Twitter, you don’t need a Twitter account to use Vine (but signing up is a little quicker if you do!)” the team responsible for Vine said today. If you’ve already logged into your iOS device with your Twitter account, you can register – with the same username – with just a couple of taps. Vine asks for a cellphone number, but it’s not mandatory.

Clips support both video and audio, and automatically loop. It’s also possible to share them not only on Twitter but on Facebook, too. Recordings don’t have to be all of one scene, either; Vine only captures video when your finger is held on the preview screen, so you can quickly join a few different scenes together for a mini-movie.

You can download Vine from the App Store here [iTunes link], and Twitter says it’s currently hard at work readying versions for other platforms. No word on when that might result in an Android app or software for other phones, however.


Vine arrives: 6s video sharing for Twitter and Facebook is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

MySpace accused of using music without permission

MySpace launched a refreshed version of its social network not long ago. Along with the launch of a refreshed version of the website also came a new single that was heavily promoted on the social network from minority MySpace partner Justin Timberlake. While MySpace certainly had permission to use the new Justin Timberlake single, one music association is accusing MySpace of using music without permission.

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The music group is called Merlin and negotiates deals on behalf of independent record labels around the world. Merlin chief executive officer Charles Caldas said in an interview recently that its music deal with MySpace had expired over a year ago. However, Caldas says that songs from more than 100 of its represented labels are still available on MySpace.

Caldas says that MySpace is using music without permission from three of the biggest independent record labels in the world including Beggars Group, Domino, and Merge. MySpace says that if songs from Merlin represented labels are still on its network, “they were likely uploaded by users.” In other words, MySpace is saying it’s not our fault.

MySpace says that if the music was uploaded by its members, the music would be removed if requested by the labels. MySpace has dropped in popularity significantly over the last several years. While MySpace was once the leading social network, Facebook has made MySpace an also ran.

[via NYTimes]


MySpace accused of using music without permission is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Is every phone the Facebook phone?

Facebook may refuse to deliver what the rumor-mill wants – an own-brand smartphone to take on the iPhone – but that’s not to say it isn’t following a cuckoo-style mobile strategy, progressively infesting handsets from other vendors. The company’s new free voice calling service, quietly revealed in the aftermath of the Facebook Graph Search announcement, is the latest in a growing suite of mobile products that, while lacking the eye-catching appeal of a glossy slab of hardware, nonetheless shows that the social network finally has a mobile strategy.

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Before the free voice calls, there was voice messaging in the Facebook mobile app, and before that Poke, which sends time-limited text, photo, and video messages that auto-destruct and warn users if the recipient attempts to save them. Dubbed Facebook’s “sexting app” it had an early stumble after being found to secretly cache concent, though the social site did quickly move to patch the bug.

Then there was Nearby, a Foursquare-style location service, and just ahead of that Photo Sync, to make it even easier to suck photos from your phone to your Facebook gallery. That’s not to mention Facebook’s $1bn grab of Instagram, despite the fact that it had just pushed out its own Camera app which replicated most of the features of its expensive acquisition.

Facebook is seldom first to offer each mobile feature. Poke was the most obviously “inspired” product, closely following in the footsteps of earlier app Snapchat, but Google has been offering free voice calls in the US for some years now, through its Gmail voice system. (That Google deal has again been extended, now covering 2013.) Facebook Camera’s similarity to Instagram and Facebook Messenger’s overlap with the huge number of IM apps – whether iMessage, GChat, WhatsApp, or even good old fashioned SMS – hardly portray the social site as the most innovative of companies.

“Facebook isn’t some naive, cash-strapped startup”

Then again, arguably it doesn’t need to be. Facebook isn’t some naive, cash-strapped startup desperate for attention and users; it’s a multi-billion dollar business with a vast user-base much of which, despite periodic outcry and calls for mass defection, shows high degrees of addiction.

Where its been struggling is in making the most of its mobile users. That’s not the same as acquiring mobile users – in fact, Facebook has plenty already, it just hasn’t been too hot at extracting some sort of financial return from them. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has fingered commerce as one potential option, but right now everything about Facebook’s mobile suite reeks of lock-in – making users keep using Facebook, and for an increasing proportion of their everyday mobile activities – rather than revolution.

Viewed in those terms, spreading itself across the common applications regularly demanded of a smartphone (calls, messaging, photo and video sharing) makes perfect sense for Facebook. A mobile commerce push would fit in with that nicely, though we can maybe excuse Facebook for not being there yet: few manufacturers, vendors, or carriers have got commerce quite right yet.

graph_searchWhat Graph Search might do for Facebook’s mobile strategy, however, is give it an all-important injection of context. Your friends and family are arguably the best recommendation engine you know, and if they don’t know the answers themselves, they may very well have “Liked” the sites, reviews, and other sources that do. Context is another area no company has nailed so far, though Google Now is perhaps one of the better approaches we’ve seen.

There’s plenty that’s been said about the importance of controlling the hardware and the software you offer, if you want to succeed in today’s mobile market. That, we’re told, is what gives Samsung sleepless nights over Android, gives Apple its edge with the tight integration of iOS and iPhone, and what Nokia has sacrificed in throwing in with Microsoft and Windows Phone. Is it not more important, though, to own the users themselves? To have a platform considered so essential, so integral to their everyday lives, that users shape their device and service shopping lists on the basis of who supports it?

Facebook could still screw up: the mobile industry moves fast, and while that makes for interesting times both as a consumer and a company, there’s little space for second-chances if you get it wrong. For all spreading itself across dozens of apps, numerous services, and a handful of platforms might not satisfy in the gut like a Facebook phone might, though, like the cuckoo chick stealing warmth, food, and ultimately attention in a foreign nest, a strategy based on mobile inclusion is just what Facebook needs.


Is every phone the Facebook phone? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

New MySpace goes public with Justin Timberlake lure

Can Justin Timberlake make MySpace cool again? That’s certainly the social network’s hope, using the lure of early access to the first track from the pop minstrel’s upcoming album to lure back old users and encourage fresh sign-ups. Inside, meanwhile, waits a dramatically redesigned social experience.

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Timberlake previewed that design back in November 2011, with the site switching its focus from being a hub for your social life to a place where music is at the center of the experience. In fact, the new MySpace even promises to play nicely with the service that arguably killed it, Facebook, offering Zuckerberg’s system as a registration option.

Until today, invitations were required if you wanted to actually use the new MySpace, but now you can use your old credentials, Facebook, or Twitter, to get access. Linking it with your other social accounts allows you to funnel your listening information across to them, too.

Timberlake – whose single, Suit & Tie feat. Jay Z, will be the first released track from new album The 20/20 Experience expected for release later in 2013 – invested in MySpace back in 2011, along with Specific Media Group. Together, they paid around $35m for the once-mighty site, after News Corp ran it into the ground.

[via Engadget]


New MySpace goes public with Justin Timberlake lure is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook shares exceed $30 for the first time since July

In September, Facebook‘s shared dropped to their all-time low, leaving some worrying what would come of it all. Now in the few months since then, the company has seen a huge increase of 70-percent, with shares priced at over $30. This is the first time they’ve broke the $30 mark since July 2012, and follows a quarterly revenue increase of 32-percent.

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While the increase is good news for the social network, the shares are still lower than they were during the company’s IPO in May – about 20-percent lower, to be precise. Facebook is working hard to get its numbers up across the board, however, with the company making some big changes recently, including the abolition of its voting methods on privacy changes, as well as plans it has in advertisement.

Yesterday, the company made a teasing announcement to “come and see” what it has planned on January 15. No details have been provided about what the event will concern, only that Facebook has been “building” something that it will reveal during the event. Some speculate that it could be a software announcement, while others are still hoping for a Facebook smartphone to be revealed.

In late December, we reported that the social network has been testing a Messages feature that would require users to pay $1 to send a message to a non-friend’s inbox rather than their “Other” folder. Likewise, the company plans to roll out video advertisements to users’ news feeds by this summer, according to some insider sources. The social network seems to have its hands in a little bit of everything at the moment, and thus far, it’s shares are reflecting optimism. Facebook is set to announce it’s Q4 report on January 30.

[via Forbes]


Facebook shares exceed $30 for the first time since July is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook says “Come and see what we’re building” on January 15 event

Feeling social? Facebook has announced a new event for later in January, with the tagline “Come and see what we’re building.” The January 15 event is being kept mysterious, with no hints as to the subject in the invite, but that’s only likely to stoke speculation in the weeks before then.

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One possibility is a new piece or software or services, perhaps building on the Instagram acquisition last year. Facebook also recently announced Poke, its short-messaging and temporary video/photo service, though that was a low-key affair and didn’t even warrant an event.

Alternatively, it could be Facebook’s much-anticipated and oft-rumored smartphone, chatter around which has been chunnering around the internet for several years. According to the latest batch of here-say, Facebook is using an HTML5 layer on top of an underlying Android OS.

We’ll be there to find out exactly what Facebook has in store for us, so join us back on January 15 for all the news! Until then, head over to our CES hub to find out what’s monopolizing headlines this week.


Facebook says “Come and see what we’re building” on January 15 event is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook invites the media to ‘come and see what we’re building’ next week

Facebook invites the media to 'come and see what we're building' next week

And the CES disruptions begin. Facebook has just broken into an absolute blitz of news out of Las Vegas in order to invite select members of the press to its California headquarters next week. The reason? Predictably, minimal clues are given out in the invite itself — we’re simply told to show up on January 15th and “see what [Facebook] is building.” You know what… we think we just might, thanks!

P.S. – Any educated guesses on the “what” can be tossed in comments below.

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Source: Facebook

Foursquare to display full user names, share more data with local businesses

Fond of your family name? Good — it’s about to get a bit more visible. Foursquare is planning to display full user names on profile pages, explaining in a recent community email that the old policy has become confusing. “If you search for a friend on Foursquare, we show their full name in the results, but when you click through to their profile page you don’t see their last name.” The team says these abbreviations made sense in Foursquare’s early days, but recently users have been asking for change. “We get emails every day saying that it’s now confusing.” The social network hopes that displaying users’ full surnames will help mitigate confusion between the John Smiths and John Smythes of the world.

The company’s tweaked privacy policy promises to share more data with businesses, too, giving store owners greater visibility of customers who have recently checked in. Users who want their quests for coffee to remain anonymous still can, of course — Foursquare was careful to remind users that they can change their “full name” whenever they want, and can opt out of sharing their location information with businesses. We wouldn’t want to step on any toes, would we? Head past the break to see the email for yourself, or check out the adjacent source link to read Foursquare’s “Privacy 101” summary.

Continue reading Foursquare to display full user names, share more data with local businesses

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: Foursquare

Facebook offers statement about site outage

Earlier today, Facebook users experienced a site outage for about 20 minutes. The issue didn’t affect mobile users, with smartphone and tablet access remaining unaffected. This issue originated after Google users were also affected by outages, prompting curiosity about whether the two issues were related. Turns out, Facebook was just tinkering.

The issue caused a bit of confusion at first, with some Facebook users reporting that the social network worked fine, and with others reporting that it couldn’t be accessed. It didn’t take long for users to realize that the mobile version of the site was working, but that attempting to access Facebook via a desktop browser resulted in an error. Less than half an hour later, all was well again.

A Facebook spokesperson offered this statement to Business Insider. “Earlier today we made a change to our DNS infrastructure and that change resulted in some people being temporarily unable to reach the site. We detected and resolved the issue quickly, and we are now back to 100 percent. We apologize for any inconvenience.”

This came after Gmail users awoke to find their email down, an issue entirely unrelated to the Facebook outage. The problem seemed to persist for certain users for about 40 minutes before being corrected. Google issued this statement at 12:10 PST: “The problem with Google Mail should be resolved. We apologize for the inconvenience and thank you for your patience and continued support.”

[via Business Insider]


Facebook offers statement about site outage is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.