Why Google can’t stop making messaging apps
Google has announced three new communication apps this week: Spaces, Allo and Duo. That’s in addition to the three it already has. To understand why it’s doing this, and why it’ll do it again, we only need to look to its past.
Twelve years ago, Google began its shift from being “just” the world’s most popular search engine to something much more: It released Gmail. Soon, the company was offering several options for communication. By 2009 Google users had a pretty robust set of tools at their disposal. Gmail for email, Talk for real-time text and voice chats, Voice for VoIP calling, and Android to facilitate everything else. Unfortunately, this simple delineation would quickly disappear as the company launched more and more services.
Google Wave was the first addition. Announced in mid-2009, it mashed together elements of bulletin boards, instant messaging and collaborative editing to pretty awesome effect. It grew a small but fervent community — I was a big fan — until Google halted development.

Then came Buzz. Launched in 2010, it was Google’s first attempt at a bona fide social network. It failed miserably, not least due to complaints about the way Google forced it upon users and some valid privacy concerns. Although neither Wave nor Buzz really competed with what the company was already offering, that would change when Google launched its next attempt at a social network, Google+.
In addition to standard social networking, Google+ also had two features that facilitated direct communication with individuals and groups: Hangouts and Huddles. Not to be mistaken with the current app, Hangouts at the time offered multiuser video chat for people in the same Circle. Huddle, on the other hand, was an instant messaging app for talking with other Google+ users.
Huddle would soon become Google+ Messenger, offering the same functionality as Google Talk, while Hangouts would expand to seriously encroach on Google Voice. Within a year, Google had added the ability to make “audio-only” calls by inviting users to join Hangouts over a regular phone line.
Google now had two apps for everything, coupled with the problem that many users — even on its Android platform — were still using SMS to communicate on the go. It began work to rectify this and unify its disparate platforms. In 2013 we got an all-new Hangouts, available cross-platform and on the web. It merged the functionality of Hangouts and Messenger, and it also replaced Talk within Gmail if you opted to upgrade. Voice was still out in the cold and SMS wasn’t integrated, but the company was moving in the right direction.
In late 2013, Google added SMS to Hangouts, and in Android 4.4 it replaced Messaging as the OS default for texting. By Oct. 2014 Google had integrated VoIP into Hangouts as well. It finally had one app for everything.
You could assert that Hangouts was a better app because of the confusing mess that preceded it. Google tried lots of things and put the best elements from all of its offerings into a single app.
That arguably should have been the end of the story, but it’s not. For whatever reason — probably because it figured out that a lot of Android users didn’t use Hangouts — Google released another app in Nov. 2014 called Messenger. This Messenger had nothing to do with Google+ but instead was a simple app focused on SMS and MMS. Hangouts could and can still handle your texts, but Messenger is now standard on Nexus phones and can be installed on any Android phone from the Play Store. This confusing muddle means that if you have, say, a new flagship Samsung phone, you’ll have two apps capable of handling your SMS (Samsung’s app and Hangouts), with the possibility of adding a third with Messenger.
Hangouts, for the most part, has been doing a fine job.
Still, SMS isn’t exactly a burning priority for most people, and Hangouts, for the most part, has been doing a fine job. I can’t say I use it that often — my conversations are mostly through Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp, because that’s where my friends are — but when I do, it’s a pleasant-enough experience. The same can be said for Google+: It’s actually a great social network now, aside from the fact that barely anyone uses it.
That’s the issue that Google faces today and the reason why these new apps exist. More people are using Facebook Messenger than Hangouts. More people are using WhatsApp than Hangouts. More people are using Snapchat than Hangouts. And everyone uses everything other than Google+.
So we now have three new apps from Google, each performing pretty different tasks. The first is Spaces. Think of it as Google+ redux redux redux. It takes the service’s fresh focus on communities and collections and puts it into an app that exists outside the social network. The end result is a mashup of Slack, Pinterest, Facebook Groups and Trello. It’s promising, but, as of writing, it’s very much a work in progress.
Next up is Allo, a reaction to Facebook Messenger and Microsoft’s efforts in the chatbot space. It uses machine learning to streamline conversations with auto replies and also offers a virtual assistant that’ll book restaurants for you, answer questions and do other chatbotty things. Just like Spaces exists outside Google+, Allo exists outside Hangouts. You don’t even need a Google account to sign up, just a phone number — much like how WhatsApp doesn’t require a Facebook account.
Finally we have Duo, which is by far the most focused of the three. It basically duplicates Hangouts’ original function: video calling. According to the PR, it makes mobile video calls “fast” and “simple,” and it’s only going to be available on Android and iOS. Both Duo and Allo also have the distinction of offering end-to-end encryption — although Allo doesn’t do so by default — the absence of which has been something privacy advocates have hated about Hangouts.
This summer, when Duo and Allo become available, Google users will be at another confusing impasse. Want to send a message to a friend? Pick from Hangouts, Allo or Messenger. Want to make a video call? Hangouts or Duo. Group chat? Hangouts, Allo or Spaces. It’s not user-friendly, and it’s not sustainable.
Sure, Facebook sustains two chat services (WhatsApp and its own Messenger) just fine, but it bought WhatsApp as a fully independent, hugely popular app and has barely changed a thing. Google doesn’t have that luxury. Instead, it’ll borrow another Facebook play: Test new features on a small audience and integrate. Over the past couple of years Facebook has released Slingshot, Rooms, Paper, Riff, Strobe, Shout, Selfied and Moments. I’m probably missing a few.
All of these apps were essentially built around a single feature: private chats, ephemeral messaging, a prettier news feed, selfies, etc. The vast majority won’t get traction on their own, but their features might prove useful enough to fold into the main Facebook and Messenger apps. And if one of them takes off, no problem, you’ve got another successful app.
This has to be Google’s strategy for Allo, Duo and Spaces. We don’t know what Google’s communication offerings will look like at the end of this year, let alone 2017. But chances are that Google will continue to float new ideas before eventually merging the best of them into a single, coherent application, as it did with Hangouts. And then it’ll start the process again. In the meantime, Google will spend money developing x number of duplicate apps, and users will have to deal with a confusing mess of applications on their home screens.
Facebook launches interactive map for Live Video
Facebook’s Live Video feature just got global thanks to an interactive map that’s rolling out on the site. If you’re looking for a stream from a random stranger you can either choose one from one of the highly ranked clips on the left side of the page, or click on one of the blue dots from everyone else on the digital globe.

To access the interactive map, a new “Live Video” app is available on the left navigation bar in your Facebook timeline. In addition to showing where a stream is originating, when you click on a video, it also shows where it’s being viewed.

The interactive map should help fans of live videos find new broadcasters. Before today, the only way to know if an account is live streaming is by following that person or brand and waiting for a notification. Facebook has been pushing Live Video aggressively lately. At its F8 developer conference it announced an open API so developers could add the feature to their cameras.
Source: Facebook
Snapchat’s content feed could go algorithmic
Snapchat’s main content feed could soon get an algorithmic shakeup, Digiday reports. According to sources, Snapchat has been working on updates to its platform that would affect professional or brand accounts and re-arrange the chronological flow of content you see from the accounts you follow.
Although it is currently unclear when the changes could be implemented, an update like this would bring Snapchat’s platform in line with Facebook’s News Feed, which ranks the content you interact with based on a number of factors and shows you more of the same. While the setup can often make it easier sort through the flood of content in your feed, it also offers ways for advertisers and publishers to buy a more visible location.
Snapchat currently boasts around 100 million daily active users, most of whom fall squarely in the coveted youth demographic, but only stories posted by partner publishers on the Discover tab are allowed to carry ads. In order to get in front of that audience, other brands and publishers run private accounts and attempt to grow their audiences organically by jumping into your Snapchat stream right alongside your friends.
As Digiday points out, an app update in March that allowed users to quickly flip through updates from all the accounts they are following might hint at what the future of Snapchat’s content stream might look like. According to Snapchat ad tech platform Delmondo, however, that update led to a 40 percent increase in views, but a 20 percent decrease in completion rate — meaning more people saw the content, but it was much easier to ignore.
Facebook shows its first video from its 360-degree camera rig
Facebook was quick to talk about being at the forefront of 360-degree video when it unveiled its Surround 360 rig, but how good is that massive 14-camera array, really? As of today, you can find out for yourself. Mark Zuckerberg has posted the social network’s first video shot and produced with the Surround 360, and it’s a good hint as to what you can expect from virtual reality movies. The 3.5-minute short is more of a tech demo than a creative work (you sit in New York City’s Grand Central Terminal as visitors walk by), but it showcases both the seamless nature of the video the potential of the format. It feels more like you’re there, not just peeping through a lens.
You can watch the video without using a VR headset. If you do, though, you’ll probably want to use your phone instead of your PC — the mobile experience lets you swing the view around just by tilting your device. However you watch, this bodes well for the aspiring VR auteurs who start building Surround 360 rigs this summer.
Check out this 360 video of Grand Central Terminal in New York City. It’s the first 360 video that we produced and filmed ourselves using our new Surround 360 camera. You can tilt your phone to experience different moments happening around you in the terminal. Turn up the sound to know where to look. It’s a preview of what a full-length virtual reality movie will feel like. Instead of watching the action, you’ll be right in the middle of it.
Posted by Mark Zuckerberg on Tuesday, May 17, 2016
Source: Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook)
French anti-racism groups target Facebook, Twitter and YouTube
Twitter, YouTube and Facebook will face legal complaints from three anti-racism groups in France, according to Le Monde. The French Jewish student union (UEJF), SOS Racisme and SOS Homophobie claim that the social networks failed to take down illegal hate speech material as required by French law. After a week-long test by the groups, the companies deleted only a fraction of videos, tweets and comments with themes like racism, homophobia and holocaust denial, they say.
Facebook was the most proactive, taking down 53 out of 156 messages or comments, while YouTube deleted just 16 out of 225 pieces of content signaled by the groups. Twitter pulled up the rear, erasing just eight out of 205 flagged tweets. The results demonstrate “an unwillingness to fight hatred on their platforms, in total contradiction with French laws and often their own terms and conditions,” say the groups. While the three social networks aren’t required to delete every single hateful comment, they must moderate such messages when reported.

Twitter’s Damien Viel with French Prime Minister, Manuel Valls at Twitter’s new Paris HQ. (Martin Bureau/AFP/Getty Images)
As Le Monde points out, Twitter’s poor takedown performance is particularly embarrassing, as the site recently inaugurated its French headquarters in Paris with French Prime Minister Manuel Valls. Last year, Valls launched a “national fight against illegal content” on social networks, calling “anti-Semetic, racist speech” on social networks “unacceptable.”
Unlike in the US, holocaust denial and other forms of hate speech are illegal in France and other European nations. In Germany, Facebook and Twitter recently agreed to delete the most serious forms of such content within 24 hours. However, in describing the difficulty for social networks to stay on top of prohibited content in France, Facebook said it deleted one particular image (related to the 2015 terrorist attacks) over 32,000 times.
However, the anti-racism associations point out that Facebook manages to “rigorously” take down any content with nudity or pornography. “This makes us question whether Facebook, which is modeled on an American vision of society, is willing to conform to the standards of the French community and legal system.” Added SOS Racisme president Dominique Sopo, “these platforms seem more shocked by bare breasts, which are promptly censored, than by hate speech content against individuals or groups.”
Via: Reuters
Source: LeMonde (translated)
John McAfee claims to have cracked secure WhatsApp messages
John McAfee is already many things — entrepreneur, presidential hopeful, alleged criminal. However, you might have to add one more item to that list: the co-discoverer of a potentially major Android security flaw. He and a team in Colorado claim to have found a hole in Google’s mobile platform that lets them read encrypted WhatsApp messages (and those from other services, for that matter), rendering its privacy safeguards pointless. McAfee is saying precious little about how the intrusion works, but he gave Cybersecurity Ventures enough details to suggest that the story might hold up.
LIFARS, which conducted forensics, notes that the trick didn’t involve getting root access to the phone, and that there were hints of both keyboard recording and spyware vulnerabilities. This could target an everyday Android phone, then, not just one that’s already compromised.
McAfee says he’s sharing the flaw after talking to Google. We’ve asked Google itself if it can shed more light on the claims and outline its plans for a fix (assuming one is needed). If his team really did find a way around encryption, though, this could represent a serious problem. Simply speaking, you couldn’t guarantee that a chat was private unless you knew that everyone was running a safe operating system.
Source: Cybersecurity Ventures
Facebook meets Glenn Beck and other conservatives this week
Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg talked about meeting leading conservatives to explain the social network’s trending topics selection, and it’s clear that he’s not wasting any time while making that happen. The company has confirmed that Zuck will meet with “about a dozen” conservative figures on May 18th, including outspoken media persona Glenn Beck. It’s not clear exactly how things will go down, although Beck maintains that it’s partly about assuring the right wing that this furor “won’t happen again” — he’s operating on the assumption that Facebook did something wrong, which isn’t necessarily true. He hopes that former presidential (and vice presidential) candidate Carly Fiorina will be involved, but Facebook hasn’t confirmed this yet.
The meeting may be more important than it seems at first blush. While the primary goal is to dispel the notion that Facebook specifically censors conservative ideas (Beck and others have largely ignored official explanations so far), it could also head off a Senate committee investigation into the company’s news filtering practices. Even though it’s doubtful that the investigation will lead to legal action — free speech rights would get in the way — Facebook likely doesn’t want to give the inquiry legitimacy by remaining silent and appearing like it has something to hide.
Source: Recode, Glenn Beck (Facebook)
Recommended Reading: Snowden on the untapped power of the press
Snowden Interview:
Why the Media Isn’t
Doing its Job
Emily Bell,
Columbia Journalism
Review
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden sat down with the Columbia Journalism Review (virtually, of course) to discuss the power of the press, using social media to fight terrorists and the concept of a global counter-terrorism task force with universal jurisdiction.
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The Inside Story of Facebook’s Biggest Setback Facebook had plans to connect millions of people in India to the internet through its Free Basics initiative. The Guardian has the story of how it all went wrong. |
An Exclusive Look at Instagram’s New App Icon Internet rage levels were high this week when Instagram made its monochrome look official. It debuted a new logo too, and Fast Company has the details on the design process. |
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Why I Bleed Green Australian tennis star Nick Kyrgios talks about the perils of keeping up with your favorite team when you have to travel all the time, including trying to stream NBA games in China. |
Imagine Discovering That Your Teaching Assistant Really Is a Robot Georgia Tech AI students knew was that the TA for their online class was named Jill Watson. They didn’t know that she’s actually a computer. |
Facebook hires U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul Grewal
Facebook is expanding its legal team — perhaps just in time — and its newest hire comes from behind the bench. U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul Grewal will join the company in late June as its Deputy General Counsel, after serving in the North District of California since being appointed in December of 2010. The Recorder first reported the move, noting that Grewal pulled out of several cases involving Facebook in January. In his time on the bench he has ruled on cases involving the social network before, like this ruling on parents trying to access messages in their dead daughter’s account, or another case over an outside developer’s storage and use of customer data.
Grewal has also been a figure in the Apple vs. Samsung patent disputes, and started tweeting early last year. In a statement, he confirmed the move, saying “Joining Facebook presents a unique opportunity to work on complex legal and policy questions that affect billions of people all over the world in a variety of ways.” Meanwhile, his new boss, VP General counsel Colin Stretch said “Paul has presided over hundreds of cases as Magistrate Judge in the Northern District of California, and has earned a reputation as a thoughtful and knowledgeable jurist with deep expertise in areas that are critically important to our company and our industry.”
Source: The Recorder
Mark Zuckerberg chimes in on Facebook’s trending topics
The swirling debate over how Facebook chooses stories for its trending topics section — and whether it is muffling stories from politically conservative sources — refuses to go away, and now the company’s leader has spoken up. In a post on Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg revealed that soon he will invite “leading conservatives and people from across the political spectrum” to talk things over. He says the site is building a platform for all ideas, and says the company has found no evidence that an anonymous report of bias in its process is true.
Source: Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook)



