Google has announced details of a new service call OpenSocial, which offers a
standard for developers looking to write applications and programs that can run
on various social networking sites.
Google OpenSocial, launched today, is the firms' first foray into social
networking. It offers a set of APIs that users can use to build applications
that work on web sites, as well as to create links between participating web
services.
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Announcing it Jeff Huber, senior vice president of engineering at Google,
said "The web is fundamentally better when it is social, and we're only just
starting to see what's possible when you bring social information into different
contexts on the web."
"There's a lot of innovation that will be spurred simply by creating a
standard way for developers to run social applications in more places. With the
input and iteration of the community, we hope OpenSocial will become a standard
set of technologies for making the web more social."
Google has social networking sites including Orkut, LinkedIn, Friendster,
Bebo, MySpace, Six Apart involved, as well as a couple of enterprise firms
including Oracle and Salesforce, but not Facebook. The set of APIs includes
tools for managing newsfeeds, profile information, social information and
activities. Tools that relate to individual users, but could also be leveraged
by businesses looking to get an over view of their employees' strengths and
areas of expertise.
Speaking to IT Week recently, Matt Glotzbach the US Enterprise director at
Google, said that he could see the benefits of such a tool, but refused to
comment on whether Google had any social networking type releases coming out.
However, he did say that all Google applications were, "enterprise candidates
", and hinted that a tool that enterprises could use to find out whether staff
were online, if they were members of any working groups, and what abilities they
had, would be very useful.
David Bradshaw of Ovum agreed. He said that such social networking tools
should appeal to businesses. "Real time collaboration, sharing, and presence
information across a range of applications could be very valuable," he
explained.
"A set of collaboration tools that you can take with you from application to
application is very useful."
Google's announcement follows a significant investment in Facebook by
Microsoft. For just 1.6 per cent of that social networking site Microsoft paid
some $240m. Facebook doesn't open up its APIs to third parties social sites, but
thousands of applications have been created for, and adopted by, its users.
Writing in his blog GigaOm, Om Malik said that the openness of the Google
tools could make it a winner, and draw developers away from Facebook. "Common
APIs mean that developers only have to learn once in order to start building
social applications for multiple websites, and any website will be able to
implement OpenSocial and host social applications… Several Facebook developers
have groused that a special Facebook-only mark-up language makes the task of
writing Facebook apps tougher," he said.
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