{"id":19,"date":"2007-04-20T17:29:34","date_gmt":"2007-04-21T01:29:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.smoblog.com\/google-social-media-supernetwork\/"},"modified":"2007-04-20T17:34:59","modified_gmt":"2007-04-21T01:34:59","slug":"google-social-media-supernetwork","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.smoblog.com\/google-social-media-supernetwork\/","title":{"rendered":"Google is organizing the world\u2019s conversation"},"content":{"rendered":"
I don\u2019t want to make this blog about all Google<\/a>, all the time<\/a>, but I\u2019m pretty confident in saying that it is going to be mostly about Google in the not too distant future. <\/p>\n The reason for this is that I\u2019m convinced that Google is putting the pieces in place not just to build a social media site, but to become a social media supernetwork<\/strong>.<\/p>\n Recent moves and acquisitions by Google make it clear that Google is not just focused on \u201corganizing the world\u2019s information\u201d, as stated in their mission statement. It\u2019s about organizing the world\u2019s conversation.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Marshall McLuhan<\/a> was dead on when he said that \u201cthe medium is the message\u201d. What he meant by that boiled down to the fact that the theory that the medium is more important than any message the medium conveys, because it\u2019s the medium that changes our consciousness.<\/p>\n Google is changing how we communicate, and by doing that they change who we are.<\/p>\n Not yet, not exactly. But they have established a beachhead on an untold (but I think very, very, large) number of computers. This leads me to…<\/p>\n Most social media sites, such as Digg, have created web browser toolbars to help their communities participate in their communities. <\/p>\n This is because the web browser is out primary gateway to the Web.<\/p>\n In Google\u2019s case, the toolbar has come first. They\u2019ve already got an established user base of many early adopters because the toolbar reports PageRank, Google\u2019s estimation of the importance of a web page \u2013 something that most website owners care about and like to monitor.<\/p>\n And tellingly, Google just begun to mimic some of StumbleUpon\u2019s functionality<\/a> by enabling toolbar users to \u2018browse\u201d sites that Google thinks might be of interest to them. StumbleUpon has built a very successful community that is all centered on this fundamental activity using their toolbar. Use of the toolbar provides a very natural way to for their users to share and recommend websites.<\/p>\n To add to all of this, they\u2019ve just made using the toolbar even more enticing as well, as now you can use it to record every site that you visit<\/a> so that you can return to it at any time. Of course, for people that already use the toolbar \u2013 they\u2019ve already been storing this data for some time and so this provides a frightening look at what\u2019s on file<\/a> for privacy minded folks.<\/p>\nThe medium is the message<\/h2>\n
But Google doesn\u2019t even have a social media site…<\/h2>\n
Google Toolbar: Google\u2019s stealth social interface<\/h2>\n
Don\u2019t buy it? When in doubt, follow the money…<\/h2>\n