Tuesday, 23 September 2014

Google admits defeat, finally drops compulsory Google+

Google admits defeat, finally drops compulsory Google+

New Gmail users will no longer have to sign up to Google's flagging social network Google+, after 2 and half 
years of mandatory social account creation. Users previously had to sign up to Google+ when signing up for 
Gmail, Google Docs and variety of other Google products.
Whilst the company still encourages users to sign up for Google+ it now has a "No thanks" button when 
offering the service during the sign up procedure for its products.
Above the "No Thanks" button, the text reads: "Help make Google better for everyone by contributing 
restaurant reviews, videos on YouTube and rating for apps, books and movies in Play Store. To share public 
content like this, you'll need a public Google+ profile."
By removing the compulsory aspect of signing up to Google+, it should help the company distance itself from previous blunders, including the unpopular integration of YouTube comments with Google+.
It was rumoured that Google were so obsessed with making Google+ work that Larry Page, Google's CEO, had tied every employee's bonus with the success of its then new social network.
Like Twitter and Digg, Google+ has also suffered from the selling of 'likes,' which some businesses used to bolster their online presence.

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