Anonymity And Pseudonyms In Social Networking


On Facebook,and now Google Plus, real names are required. Since its launch,there has been a fair amount of controversy surrounding the Google Plus policies,including this from a former Google employee who goes by the name of Skud,who had her account suspended. Today Jyri posted (on Google Plus) about Pseudonymous Accounts and why they should be permitted. He argues that people should “not be booted off the system for using a made up name” and quotes the diary of a gay teenage girl,Agnes,writing about her love interest,Elin,in Show Me Love:

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Google Responds to Google+ Account Suspension Controversy


Already using Google+? Follow Mashable’s Pete Cashmore for the latest about the platform’s new features,tips and tricks as well as social media and technology updates.

Google has finally made a public statement about the recent wave of controversial Google+ account suspensions designed to enforce the company’s “common name” policy.

The policy is outlined in section 13 of the company’s User Content and Conduct Policy. It’s designed to stop users from creating fake profiles and to set a positive tone. Section 13 reads as follows:

“To help fight spam and prevent fake profiles,use the name your friends,family or co-workers usually call you. For example,if your full legal name is Charles Jones Jr. but you normally use Chuck Jones or Junior Jones,either of those would be acceptable.”

This weekend,Google started enforcing the policy,deleting a large number of Google+ accounts. While some of the suspended accounts were indeed fake profiles,others like Limor “Ladyada” Fried and lifestyle blogger A.V. Flox were accidentally deleted and quickly restored.

SEE ALSO:GOOGLE+:THE COMPLETE GUIDE | VIDEOS | REVIEW

Google SVP of Social Vic Gundotra admitted to Robert Scoble on Sunday that the company has made some mistakes with its first attempt at cracking down on fake profiles. And Monday,Google VP of Product Bradley Horowitz wrote a more detailed post in an attempt to clear the air and set the record straight.

“We’ve noticed that many violations of the Google+ common name policy were in fact well-intentioned and inadvertent and for these users our process can be frustrating and disappointing,” Horowitz said in his Google+ post. “So we’re currently making a number of improvements to this process,specifically regarding how we notify these users that they’re not in compliance with Google+ policies and how we communicate the remedies available to them.”

Among the changes Google intends to implement:

- Google will give users more warning and the chance to comply with the common name policy.
- The company is improving the signup process.
- Finally,the search giant is exploring better ways to support nicknames,maiden names and pseudonyms.

Horowitz also took time to dispel the rumor that a suspension of a Google+ account means that a user loses his or her access to Gmail,Google Docs or other Google services. “When an account is suspended for violating the Google+ common name standards,access to Gmail or other products that don’t require a Google+ profile are not removed,” he said.

Google+,which will hit its one-month anniversary on Thursday,has clearly been suffering from growing pains. It has received strong criticism for its handling of Google+ brand pages.

More About:Bradley Horowitz,Common Names,Google,Google Plus,robert scoble,social networking,Vic Gundotra

For more Social Media coverage:

New Sites Offer Circle Recommendations for Google Plus

Google plus icons 150x150Looking for people to Circle on Google Plus? Several new sites have popped up with ideas for "suggested circles." Unfortunately,Google Plus itself doesn't offer a way for users to share Circles with their friends,so for now,manually reproducing these Circles is your only option. But for those who are willing to put in the time,you'll be hitting that 5,000 friend limit pretty quickly.

Sponsor

OK,maybe I'm exaggerating a little about hitting the 5,000-user limit - but you'll definitely find some new people to follow on these sites,especially if you're interested in technology.

With Circles,You Can Follow More People!

Circles

From the comments I've read on Google Plus,many of you out there are still using Google's new social network a lot like Facebook when it comes to how many friends you add...err..."encircle."

In fact,one particularly controversial thread started this weekend by Digg founder Kevin Rose called out über-power user Robert Scoble for "using the Internet wrong." Scoble was complaining about the noise on Google Plus,which struck Rose as ridiculous,given that Scoble follows 5,000 people.

While personally,I think everyone should feel free to use social networks as they see fit,if anyone was really missing the boat regarding Google Plus' potential,it was Rose,not Scoble. Although Scoble's stress-testing often does hit levels "regular" users will never reach,on Google Plus,5,000 people is not an inconceivable limit.

Here's why:

Google Plus is the first social network that actually encourages users to follow more people,not fewer.

On sites like Facebook and Twitter,adding too many friends turns your streams into a mess. Add real-time updating,and it's impossible to even read the content as it zips by. There are workarounds for this problem - Facebook lists and groups,or Twitter lists,for example,but none are as elegant a solution as Google Plus's Circles.

The "Other" Dunbar Number

Until now,typical social network user behavior was that,instead of over-subscribing,you would limit your friending activities to match your cognitive limits. In many cases,people max out at "Dunbar's number," or 150. According to Robin Dunbar, a professor of evolutionary anthropology at the University of Oxford, human beings can hold only about 150 meaningful relationships in their heads.

But here's a side note to that oft-quoted research - Dunbar also said that human beings have the ability to recognize about 1,500 people. So why shouldn't there be networks that tap into our ability to function in a wider community filled with familiar faces?

Hello,Google Plus.

Circle Suggestion Sites

As soon as Google Plus launched,Circle suggestion ideas popped up all across the network,as well as in the occasional blog post - like this one with a suggested Photographers Circle. Now we're starting to see more formal efforts appearing. Although reaching the 5,000-person limit may be difficult for the average user,there are several new sites that may help get the creative juices following.

For example,I've been enjoying Share This Circle,a site that offers everything from niche Circles like "Italians abroad" to more mainstream fare like "Authors" or "Celebrities." In most cases,the Circles were curated externally,by individuals or other media outlets,but have been centralized here for easy access.

Share This Circle

Another new site,RecommendedUsers.com,groups techies into Circles like "Podcasters" and "Bloggers." However,the categories on this site have too much overlap in some cases. We wonder why some bloggers are listed as "authors," while others are "journalists" and others still are just "bloggers?"  It's a little confusing. The site's owner Alireza Yavari says that he's updating the lists soon based on feedback,so hopefully they will be cleaned up a bit.

And even more lists are coming,too,thanks to crowdsourcing. (You can see all the new categories in the dropdown list on the suggestions page.)

Recommendedusers 2

If you have time to kill,it's fun to dig around in these pre-made groups to see if there are people you missed,or Circle ideas you want to duplicate on your own.

Do you have any great Circle ideas? Let us know in the comments!

Discuss

Reality Check:Google Plus Is No Facebook Or Twitter Killer (But It Might Hurt WordPress And Tumblr)

Hey,did you hear? Google has a new social network!

It’s called Google Plus,and it’s kind of a big deal. At least,that’s what we’re being told. Over,and over,and over. Yep,Google Plus is the best thing since Facebook. In fact,it’s better than Facebook. And it’s better than Twitter. In fact,Google Plus is going to be the death of them both!

Poppycock. Not only is Google Plus one of the biggest examples of style-over-substance and over-hype that the Internet has seen,it will be prove to be absolutely no threat to the dominance of Facebook and Twitter within their respective niches.

And while there are some aspects of Google Plus that are fairly innovative (and have made it attractive to early adopters),other parts of the platform have been so poorly thought out and executed that it begs belief. Other highly-celebrated features flatter to deceive,whilst being all-but-ignored by those clapping the loudest.

The Hype

Google Plus  has certainly arrived with considerable fanfare. Using the same approach that made Gmail so desirable,Google Plus  launched as invite-only,with the platform open only to a lucky few. This wasn’t entirely random — Google was careful to pre-invite many thought leaders,bloggers and pundits in the tech space (particularly in Silicon Valley),as they were always going to have a lot to say. And say it loudly.

This created an early demand that probably hasn’t been matched in internet history. The Wall Street Journal reported that in just three weeks,Google+ has had 20 million unique visitors since its launch. Even Mark Zuckerberg signed up,quickly becoming the most-followed user on the network.

Of course,visitors isn’t the same thing as users,and users isn’t the same thing as active users. So how many people have signed up for Google+? Using a surname-based analysis system,Ancestor.com founder and statistician Paul Allen pegged the membership at 10 million on July 7,a feat achieved in just 16 days. As a comparison,it took Twitter 780 days and Facebook 852 days to reach the 10 million user mark.

I mean,look at this growth — insane!

Since then,Allen estimates that Google Plus is up to 18 million to 20 million users,all achieved in about three weeks. No wonder Zuck has signed up — he’ll have nowhere else to go at this rate.

The Reality

Google Plus seems exciting now because it’s new and shiny and lots of major tech players are giving it a decent amount of attention. But it’s deceptive,and underneath very little is actually going on.

Google Plus’ 20 million signups in such a small period of time certainly seems impressive. But this is Google,a well-established search giant that already boasts over a billion users. Couple that with the must-scratch-itch that is invite-only,and you have an influx that was both predictable and self-fulfilling.

But it’s not as good as it looks. For the week ending July 19,2011,Experian Hitwise says that Google Plus had some 1.8 million visits. That number was up 283 percent from the previous week,but relatively it’s tiny,both compared to Facebook and Twitter,but also to the number of registered profiles on Google Plus.

If Google Plus actually has 20 million signups,that means that on any given day of that week only a fraction over a quarter of a million bothered to come back. That’s about 1.3 percent. Even if you assume there are only 10 million registered users,that’s still only 2.6 percent. It’s actually less than that,as number of those visits are from brand-new users.

Either way,it’s hardly a healthy stat for long-term growth. And anecdotally I’ve seen a lot of evidence of this myself. I’ve invited dozens and dozens of my friends to Google+,and of those who have bothered to sign up (probably less than half),the vast majority – easily 90% – have registered,had a quick look round and then promptly departed,never to return. The question I’m hearing again and again is:I already have Facebook and/or Twitter,so why do I need this?

The thing is,if you register on Google+ and follow a portion of the most-followed users – people like Danny Sullivan,Robert Scoble,Leo Laporte,Kevin Rose and Steve Rubel – you’ll start to believe that Google+ is the most popular thing,like,ever. Look at all those posts. More impressive,look at all those comments. Such engagement!

But it’s an illusion. These guys come with a ready-made audience,most of whom follow them pretty much anywhere. Google+ is the best thing that ever happened to them. This isn’t a criticism – they all produce first-class content. But just because they’re seeing a lot of reactions and getting a great response to their posts doesn’t mean everybody else is. In fact,virtually nobody else is. Try visiting the Google+ profiles of many of the people commenting in these guys’ posts. With a few exceptions,it’s a ghost town.

And Mark Zuckerberg racking up at least 350,000 followers isn’t proof of anything. Zuck could show up at MySpace and have 350,000 followers by the end of the day.

And let’s not forget that Google Plus had the help of Facebook and Twitter to generate all of this publicity. I don’t think we can credit this enough. A combined billion users (give or take some crossover) went completely nuts about Google Plus,with some 1.9 million tweets,107,000 blog posts,30,000 online news articles and 153,000 forum posts made about Google+ in the first two weeks of its launch. But this isn’t proof of success,as the vast majority of these people didn’t even have invites to the platform. It’s proof of hype,but also proof of the power of Facebook and Twitter,both of whom didn’t have the same help when they first opened their doors.

When it launched,Twitter had a little bit of help from Facebook. And Facebook had a little bit of help from MySpace,because it was so decidedly awful.

(Also,it’s worth observing that even with all this fuss,mentions of Google Plus were dwarfed by mentions of Facebook and Twitter over that same period.)

People have very short memories. When the much-derided Google Buzz opened it generated 9 million posts in the first 56 hours. It’s Google. These kinds of launches are inevitable. It doesn’t mean anything.

Where Google Got Social Right

Hangouts

Hangouts,the Google Plus live video chat,are proving very popular with a lot of users (although typically only when launched by somebody well-established and/or downright famous). Because Hangouts support multiple users,Google has one-upped Facebook’s one-on-one Skype integration,although it can’t be long until that also supports group video chat.

The User Interface

Google Plus looks great. So clean and minimalist,it totally reminds me of FriendFeed (more on that later).

Where Google Got Social Wrong (Again)

How about everywhere else?

Circles

This is being touted as Google Plus’ killer feature,as circles allow anyone to digitally organize their friends,as proposed by Paul Adam in his much-loved presentation,The Real Life Social Network. It’s so easy — simply drag and drop a friend into the circle of your choice. You can then click on any circle in your sidebar to see just content from those users. Even better,you can send your own content to any circle of your choice. Talk about targeted marketing!

The thing is:this is broken. Circles sound like a good idea on paper but in reality they don’t work. Why? Two main reasons. One,because people cannot digitally organize their friends by interest. And two,even if you could nobody talks about that same interest constantly and nothing else. In other words,a given person cannot be defined by something they like. Certainly not just that.

I’ll give you an example:Danny Sullivan. Danny is head of Search Engine Land and produces a ton of outstanding content about that space. I follow Danny on Google Plus,and filed him away in the appropriate circle. But the problem is that Danny doesn’t just talk about search engines. He also shares a lot of photos of sunsets and beaches and stuff like that. Which is fine — he can write about what he wants. Which,of course,is the crux of the issue. I could file Danny over multiple circles (search,tech,photos,sunsets,and so on) or I could keep him filed under one,but none of them are going to be accurate,because Danny Sullivan is not a robot,blindly mass-producing content about a finite number of subjects. He’s a person,and people aren’t easily pigeonholed.

This is an ongoing issue. Not only is the circle filing system likely to be inaccurate,but to make it even remotely useful you have to keep modifying and revising your circles as you start to follow new people and existing followers prove themselves to be somebody else.

Bottom line:most people won’t bother. They’ll just start to file everybody under one big circle,and put it up with it. And that’s exactly what will happen when you group too many people into one circle,especially if they’re pundits or self-promoters — the circle becomes unusable,almost instantly. A veritable nightmare of ramblings and noise.

This is the problem when you don’t have a character limit on status updates. Twitter has 140,Facebook has 420,and Google+ has no limit,at least not one that I’ve seen reached. Some of the updates are so long that they fill up multiple screens. Seriously:who wants that? Who signed up to see that? If I wanted to see every word of every article you’ve written I’d visit your blog. And cherry pick.

That’s the problem with circles as an input measure. For output,they’re even worse. Google thought they were being really smart by letting us,as individuals,decide who goes where,and then broadcasting to them accordingly. But as a system it simply does work,because of the reasons I’ve already outlined:I don’t know what you like. And you don’t know what I like. You might think you do,and Google might even be able to provide you with an algorithmic guesstimate that’s pretty accurate at this moment right now,but come tomorrow things will have changed. Come next week and next month and they’ll have changed completely. I’m not all about Twitter,and I’m not all about social media. I don’t want to see everything ever written about those things. I don’t see no ring on this finger. You don’t own me!

As you can see the way the output part of circles has been defined is backward. I shouldn’t be tagging you by your interests — you should be tagging yourself based on your own interests. You know what you like. Nobody else does. And you know that tomorrow you might not like that thing anymore. But I’ll still think your its biggest fan,blinding pushing my now-irritating content your way 24/7. Right up until you unfollow me. Hooray! Everybody wins.

If Google had set up circles so people tagged themselves,it could be a world-beater. I’d set up a Circle called Twitter,and other people would opt into it,ike a mailing list,circa 2011. Visit my profile,check out my different circles of topics,and sign up for what you want. That’s a winning content delivery system. And it will work because users choose what they want to see,rather than the broadcaster picking for them. Moreover,I could quickly see which of my circles was the most popular,and focus my efforts on that.

To me,the biggest proof that circles don’t work is the way that the Google Plus superstars like Scoble,Rubel and Sullivan are using them. Namely,they don’t. They post everything they do public. And why wouldn’t they? Who wants less people to see their content? It’s fundamentally opposed to everything we’ve ever been taught. Sure,targeted marketing certainly has its place,but only when people opt-in. Not the other way around.

And let’s remember that Facebook has had this feature forever,except over there it’s called Groups. And nobody uses it. Why would it be any different on Google?

Sparks

Are you having a laugh,Google?

I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a fundamentally useless,bolted-on-at-the-last-minute worthless piece of crap.

Search

The Google Plus search feature is… non-existent. You can find people and you can search via sparks (so sweet),but that’s it.

I mean:this is Google,right? Who thought leaving out a search box was a good idea?

Brand Profiles

Google Plus didn’t launch with brand profiles,promising to add them later,and announced that they only wanted real people to make profiles. Specifically:no non-humans (which I have to say I welcome). Google warned users that they’d remove any brand profiles that were set up. And on July 21,that’s exactly what they did,much to the chagrin of those involved. All except for Mashable,whose excess of 100,000 followers was saved and renamed as founder Pete Cashmore. All the other accounts — which included some major players such as Coca Cola and Good Morning America — were nuked. Talk about one rule for one.

The Scoble Effect

I’ve touched upon this a couple of times in this post but it needs more explanation. Basically,Robert Scoble ruins everything. He’s the Jack Nicklaus of social networks,because when you factor in what he’s done and doing compared to everybody else,it all falls apart. There is no comparison. He’s out there,alone,like Jonah versus the whale.

This isn’t me knocking the guy. I like him. Scoble is the early adopter personified,and gives every new major social network 100 percent of his attention. He follows bazillions of other users and seems to read everything they all post. He also generates a lot of his own content,all of which gets a bazillion comments.

So what happens is if you want Robert Scoble in your network,you are basically saying:I do not want to use this network. In fact,I want it ruined. This was true on FriendFeed,it was true on Google Buzz and it’s even truer on Google Plus. It isn’t an issue on Twitter because of the strict character limit. But when anything goes,then it’s game over. As I said,Scoble ruins everything. He even acknowledges this himself. It’s the litmus test of every new social platform.

But it’s not just Robert who breaks Google Plus. It’s all the other power users,too. Because Google Plus has relatively no controls over content,if you add more than a couple of these guys to your stream then Google Plus becomes essentially unusable. With their continuous updates and pages and pages of comments,they drown out everybody else so much that it’s both impressive and completely infuriating. Don’t worry — very soon you won’t care,because you’ll have stopped using Google+.

FriendFeed Again

To me,Google Plus is basically FriendFeed all over again. Bigger platform,and beefed-up,sure,but it’s essentially the same tech crowd (almost exactly),each of whom are showing the same enthusiasm,which delivers the same hype,which ultimately produces the same lack of returning users,simply because very few of them care about the same things to the same degree.

On that initial visit,Google Plus is just as overwhelming for most people as Friendfeed was. (And I liked FriendFeed,but it was never going to appeal to non-technical folk.) It doesn’t have the simplicity of Twitter and it doesn’t have the familiarity (and comfort) of Facebook. Instead,it sits somewhere between the two,satisfying neither one user nor the other,and ultimately appealing to neither.

Why Google Plus Is No Threat To Facebook

The people who are most active about the threat posed by Facebook,or what it is that they don’t like about the platform,are often the same people mentioned in this article. That is,early adopters,tech pundits,web entrepreneurs,journalists and high-profile bloggers. But cool as a lot of these guys are,they aren’t normal people. They aren’t the majority. They aren’t the hundreds of millions of people who use Facebook to chat with friends and family,and to play games. There’s fundamentally no reason whatsoever for these same people to leave Facebook and move over to Google Plus. Even if Google Plus copies Facebook exactly there’s no reason,as they already have what they need on Facebook.

Yep,it’s certainly true that nothing lasts forever — MySpace and AOL are the best (and increasingly cliched) examples of that. But at 750 million users plus,Facebook isn’t going away anytime soon. And Google Plus isn’t enough of a temptation to make any significant dent in that user base.

Why Google Plus Is No Threat To Twitter

People who want Twitter — that is,the majority of users,not the loudest users – want it because of what it is:a short,quick messaging service that,if one follows the right profiles (and ‘right’ is of course a very relative term – what’s right for you?) provides an easy (and powerful) way to position yourself right on the edge of the information curve.

Those same short updates also works brilliantly on most mobile phones,making Twitter very addictive.

If Google Plus has any appeal to the man in the street,it’s for vastly different reasons than why they’re using Twitter.

Google Plus As A Blogging Platform

Because there aren’t any limits to content updates,GooglePlus does work as a blogging system,and it could become a viable alternative to WordPress,Tumblr and Posterous for bloggers.

We’ve already seen some evidence of this with people like Kevin Rose and Bill Gross pointing their personal web domains directly at their Google profiles. Of course,they can reverse this any time they like,but it could be a trend of things to come,and it will be interesting to see if Google+ begins to take some share away from the established blogging platforms.

The Big Question

Google Plus could top 100 might users with little or no effort — because it’s Google. The key thing is what it takes to get the platform to the next level in social networking:The much-desired billion users. So let’s ask this question again:why would the average person leave Facebook for Google Plus,when it’s mostly the same and what’s different is a bit of a mess? Why on earth would they leave Twitter,when they’re a complete apple and oranges comparison?

Why do they have to leave at all? Surely there’s room on the block for another major social network — can’t we all just get along? So here’s what I think is the biggest question:Can people really cope with the work it takes to successfully manage three social networks?

More importantly,will they?

Because if they can’t,or won’t,it doesn’t matter what Google Plus does,what features it introduces and what fixes it makes to those already on the system. Because,relatively at first,and later in actuality,almost nobody will be paying attention.

HOW TO:Use Google+ For Your Job Search


Already using Google+? Follow Mashable’s Pete Cashmore for the latest about the platform’s new features,tips and tricks as well as social media and technology updates.

Google+ hit 20 million unique visitors this week,and the company launched a mobile app. The stats are impressive,but the new social network has room to grow in catching up with its massive competitors Twitter and Facebook.

Early adopters of Google+ are captivated by the network’s growth,as many tech elites — including Mark Zuckerberg,Robert Scoble and Kevin Rose — have amassed large followings in just weeks.

SEE ALSO:GOOGLE+:THE COMPLETE GUIDE | VIDEOS | REVIEW

Google+ hasn’t hit a mainstream audience yet,but it does seem to be romancing the tech geeks with strong force. Yes,I’m talking about you,fellow Mashable readers. Early adopters,social influencers,tech innovators,digital natives — call yourselves what you will. The bottom line is,you understand the value of digital tools and how they can connect you to people and ideas all over the world.

With so many influential techies flocking to Google+,it’s a great place to showcase expertise and learn from others. Here are some tips for using Google+ for your job search.


Announce Your Availability


Once your profile is completely filled out,and you’ve begun growing and interacting with your network,don’t be shy about letting your contacts know you’re on the prowl for work.

This could be as subtle as mentioning it in the “About” section of your Google+ profile,or as public as posting an update to announce that you’re looking for new challenges on the career front. If you choose the latter,be original with your post and how you frame it. Try not to sound hopeless — make sure you are confidently communicating your unique skill set and the value you can add to a project or company.


Organize Contacts with Circles



Google+ Circles




The Google+ Circles screen allows you to drag-and-drop your friends into different friend categories.


Drag-and-Drop Friends




When you drag a friend over a circle,the circle expands.


Google Explains Google+ Circles




This is the message you'll receive the first time you add somebody to a circle.


Inside a Google+ Circle




Clicking on a circle lets you look at all the members of that group,as well as change things such as the membership and the name of the circle.


Playing with Google+ Circles




Here's what Google+ Circles might look like after a few minutes of work.

The key to a fulfilling Google+ experience is Circles,the heart of this social network’s organization system. Circles give users control over who sees their content. To connect with another user on Google+,you must add him or her to a Circle,such as “Friends,” “Family,” “Work” or “Softball Team.” Users can create as many Circles as they’d like,though we’d recommend limiting them to a manageable number — having too many can dilute the experience.

For the purposes of seeking a job,it’s important to denote which Circles you want to see your messages when you post. If you’re posting about your job search,it makes sense to include your industry contacts — which you might put into “Social Media” or “Tech” Circles,for example — but that same post might not be as relevant to your “Friends” or “Family,” where a more personal post may be more appropriate.

On the flip side,make sure you’re not sharing unprofessional content with your business network. As usual,just use common sense when dealing with privacy and sharing settings.


Host a Relevant Hangout


John Havens,formerly of Porter Novelli,plans to enhance his job search with Hangouts,Google+’s group video-chat service. Instead of focusing his chat on getting a job,Havens plans on inviting a number of influential contacts to discuss relevant topics,such as the state of social media and virtual currency. He says he’ll let participants know that he has been “digitally downsized,” and that he’s open to discussing new positions afterwards,but that his Hangout will focus on generating intelligent conversation.

“Essentially,I’m trying to think of the best ways to show potential employers that by running a campaign to get myself hired,I’m showing them how I’d bring value to their organizations,” Havens says.


Share &Follow Relevant Expertise


In order to be seen as an industry expert,you need to showcase that you know what you’re talking about. Tech enthusiasts tend to use Twitter and blogging for this purpose,but Google+ is quickly becoming another outlet for sharing and discovering tastemaker opinions and interesting content.

If you’re not a natural at finding and sharing content that connections in your Circles may find valuable,check out Sparks,the product’s content recommendation engine. You can define topics you’re interested in — or that you want to learn more about — and it will bring up content the algorithm believes you’ll find useful. You can add your favorite sparks to the left-hand navigation for easy perusal when you’re on your Google+ homepage.

Choosing the right mix of sparks to read each day may lead to you becoming more informed about news and conversation in your industry.


Your Tips


Having launched less than one month ago,Google+ is in its infancy,and our tips are just the tip of the iceberg. If you’re using Google+ for your job search,let us know about your strategy in the comments below.


Development Job Listings


Every week we put out a list of social media and web job opportunities. While we post a huge range of job listings,we’ve selected some of the top dev &design job opportunities from the past two weeks to get you started. Happy hunting!


More Job Search Resources From Mashable


- HOW TO:Spruce Up a Boring Resume [INFOGRAPHIC]
- Tips For Negotiating Employee Equity
- HOW TO:Land a Job at Airbnb
- HOW TO:Set Up an Online Resume
- HOW TO:Land a Job at LinkedIn

More About:Google,Google Circles,Google Hangouts,Google Plus,Google Sparks,job search series,trending

For more Social Media coverage:

Google is Planning to Launch Verified Social Media Accounts for Celebrities on Google Plus

Google Plus to provide verified accounts to celebrities

Google Plus Business Profiles Are Coming Q3,Analytics and All

Companies clamoring to build a presence on Google's new social network have a few more months to wait. Business profiles are coming to Google Plus around the third quarter of this year,according to a story on VentureBeat.

While Google hasn't revealed many details about what the brand profiles will include,a Google representative told VentureBeat that users should expect "a level of analytics and measurement that you'd typically find in Google products," hinting at the inclusion of analytics in business accounts.

Sponsor

Google is urging brands to wait for these official business profiles rather than set up their own,which the company said would not be able to be automatically migrated once the brand profiles launch.

The absence of business profiles on Google Plus has been a point of contention for some brands and media outlets,a handful of which decided to set up their own profiles,despite Google's wishes. This week,Google began pulling down some of these brand pages and Mashable has decided to remove company branding and instead operate its 100,000 follower strong profile using the name and likeness of its CEO,Pete Cashmore.

"The platform at the moment is not built for the business use case,and we want to help you build long-term relationships with your customers," Google's Christian Oestlien said in a post on Google Plus. "Doing it right is worth the wait."

Google has said that they will continue to disable unauthorized business profiles ahead of their official launch later this year. In the meantime there are a number of ways that businesses can make the most of Google Plus.


Discuss

Google Buys Social Media Giant Fridge to Give Stronger Base to Google+

Google acquires Fridge To give strong launch to Google Plus

Google Plus Now My #3 Referring Site.


Google Plus now has 20m+ users and a the press can’t get enough of it. The obvious question is what does engagement look like both near and long-term. One indicator is referral traffic. So here is a look at referrals to www.ryanspoon.com. Obviously it not the ideal example – but content is shared equally across Facebook,Twitter and Google Plus. So it is fair…

Here are two charts of the top referring sites.

First,for all of July (note that Google Plus was days old on July 1):

Google Plus still trails Facebook and Twitter. Google Plus represents about 55% of Twitter’s referrals… to put that in perspective,I have ~5x the followers on Twitter than I do on Google Plus. Clearly there is a higher engagement ration there.

The last week (Google Plus now more open &popular):

Over the last week Google Plus is the #3 referring site and ahead of Twitter and Facebook. Clearly this is imperfect data since Facebook and Twitter shifted markedly over the month (historically they are about even) but it is impressive that:

1. Google Plus is making a significant contribution just a couple weeks into launch
2. Google plays such a meaningful in referral traffic:Google,SEO,SEM,Plus,etc.

Of course this has real implications for marketers &brands and how they should think about leveraging / interacting on Google Plus. Furthermore,it is a powerful position for Google (should the trend continue) because they can begin connecting the properties (SEO,SEM,Plus,.com)… which in turn will cause marketers (and their budgets) to dedicate themselves further to Google.

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HOW TO:Integrate Google+ Into Your WordPress Site


Already using Google+? Follow Mashable’s Pete Cashmore for the latest about the platform’s new features,tips and tricks as well as our top social media and technology updates.

This month’s hot topic has been,without a doubt,Google+. Whether the new social service from the world’s largest search company will be a “Facebook killer” remains to be seen,but one thing’s for certain:This is one social network you don’t want to ignore.

When it comes to getting found,Google+ is fast becoming a great asset for bloggers and content producers thanks to its ever-expanding user base and simple sharing tools. In this post,we’ll show you a few ways to start spreading a little of that Google+ love on your WordPress-powered website.


Display Your Google+ Profile Information


google card imageSoftware developer John Henson from PlusDevs has developed a handy,easy to use WordPress widget that displays your Google+ profile on your blog. The setup is quick and simple:Install the plug-in and drag the widget into your sidebar. Just fill out the form and you’re done.

You can also incorporate the widget into your template with only a few lines of PHP code,giving you the flexibility to place it anywhere within your layout.

You can learn more about the widget in the official blog post or jump straight to the code on GitHub.

Unofficial Google+ user tracking site SocialStatistics.com also offers an embeddable Google+ widget. Simply add your profile to their database and grab the widget code from your page on their site.


Add the +1 Button


If you’re not already using the Google +1 button,consider taking a moment to add it to your site. This is a great way to let users save,promote and find their favorite content. The +1 button only takes a few minutes to integrate with your site and works with any Google profile. While this isn’t a Google+ specific feature,we wouldn’t be at all surprised to see it integrated with the service. Either way,it’s another great way of adding an additional avenue for promotion and sharing.

You can learn more about the +1 button from Google.

To add it to your WordPress site,you can either use the official +1 button code generator from Google or take a look at the myriad +1 button WordPress plug-ins available.


Use a Google+ Inspired Theme


Do you love the look of Google+’s clean,intuitive layout and unobtrusive interface? For the die-hard fan (or,hey,maybe you run a blog that’s centered around the service),there are already a few Google+ inspired WordPress themes for your perusal.

WP Plus

wp plus image

WP Plus is a fixed-width,3 column Google+ inspred WordPress theme supporting custom content menus,styled sticky-posts and valid XHTML/CSS code. Clean,fast-loading and SEO optimized,WP Plus gives your blog the Google+ look and feel in just minutes.

PlusOne

plus one image

Similar to WP Plus,PlusOne is another 3-column,fixed-width Google+ styled theme that supports custom WordPress menus. It’s a clean and well-designed theme,but it does take some liberties with how it translates Google+ to WordPress (so it doesn’t look quite as accurate to Google’s own design).

Reflex+

reflex plus image

Reflex+ shares all of the features mentioned in the above two theme but it also brings in jQuery and incorporates AJAX for some tasks,such as the “read more” post navigation,helping it appear more fluid and seamless.


Want More?


Google+ is still a relatively new service locked behind an invite-only registration system. No doubt as time progresses and the service grows,there will be more options for publishers. Right now there are a couple of options if you’re a developer interested in having a go at creating your own Google+ plug-in.

If you’d like to gain access to the official Google+ API,you’ll need to sign up with Google to register interest in a Google+ developer account. Unfortunately,the API is not yet public. It’s unclear whether this will change as the service matures,but inquiring about developer access is certainly worth looking into if you want serious Google+ integration and sharing between your site and the service.

For a more portable (and presumably trimmed-down) solution,software developer Jason Striegel has put together a collection of PHP utilities for a locally-hosted Google+ API service. In its current state,the API will allow you to retrieve post and profile data and post to Google+. You can check out his code on GitHub. This is a great option to include within your own distributed code,such as WordPress plug-ins and widgets.


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