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October 24, 2008 7:46 AM PDT

Search shift gives Google Profiles new prominence

by Stephen Shankland
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Google's Profiles page lets people change settings for all their Google services. How socially aware will the site become?

Google's Profiles page lets people change settings for all their Google services. How socially aware will the site become?

(Credit: CNET News)

Google Profiles got its start as a way to centralize users' settings and self-descriptions. Now Google has now flipped a switch to let search engines discover people's profiles, giving the service a much greater social component.

Before, profiles were effectively invisible to search engines, but last week, the company changed that setting, as ZDNet blogger and iQmetrix programmer Garett Rogers noticed. And Google clearly wants people's profiles to be noticed.

"The more information you provide, the easier it will be for friends to find you," Google says on the page, where people can enter profile information such as the places where they grew up, the schools they attended, links to their publicly available Web pages, their interests, and helpfully for Google's research department, things they can't find on Google.

For now, at least, the profiles page lacks the socially interconnected features of Web sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, and Google's own Orkut. But with profiles now giving a new anchor to Google users' online presence, it's not a stretch to imagine Google headed this direction.

A widget here, a social graph there, maybe a feed to broadcast and spotlight people's online activities, and pretty soon, Google might have another shot at social networking with popularity broader than the Orkut's niche.

Indeed, that's what Yahoo is trying to do with its new socially engaged profiles pages.

Google acknowledged the search visibility move for profiles but declined to shed much light on its plans for profiles.

"Recently, we added the ability to search all public profiles created by users. If a user has checked the 'Show full name publicly so people can find you' box on the profile edit page, their profile is a publicly accessible Web page and is indexed in search results," the company said in a statement.

The company framed the move in the context of its ever-present top priority of improving search. How does Google Profiles do that, exactly? The company offered two reasons to me: First, it lets people control their own presentation on the Web better--something that could well appeal to those who aren't happy that a vanity search on their name leads people to something embarrassing. Second, it could make it easier for people to find others on the Internet.

Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank.
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by umbrae October 24, 2008 8:18 AM PDT
Funny, I do not see the option to remain private or make myself public. I guess Google did not think it was important for people to really control these settings. Just like showing my house on Street View: Google has really lost touch with its DO NO EVIL motto...
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by slecalvez October 24, 2008 9:20 AM PDT
I agree with you umbrae... Google is no longer the "DO NO EVIL" company, actually.... it NEVER was! But a lot of gullible people still think their the good guys. pffff.
by BIGELLOW October 24, 2008 2:49 PM PDT
So somehow Google is "evil" because you can't see the clearly labeled "edit profile" link which features the ever obvious "Show full name publicly so people can find you" link?

Wow. I guess "evil" just means doing something that Internet commenters aren't 100% happy about. Can't wait to see what THAT "Bible" looks like. Wikipedia, perhaps?
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