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    Home » Opinion » Paul Jacobson » Google+ and the privacy question

    Google+ and the privacy question

    By Editor8 July 2011
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    [By Paul Jacobson]

    I’ve been using Google+ for a few days now and, despite being a “limited field test”, it has a brilliant approach to privacy.

    If you are unfamiliar with Google+, it’s Google’s latest attempt to offer an alternative to Facebook. Google already has another social network, in the form of Orkut, but it’s only popular in India and Brazil.

    Google+ is intended to answer many of the issues that people have with Facebook, especially on the issue of privacy. At Google+’s core is the Circles feature. Circles offers users fairly granular control over their contacts and what they share with whom.

    Circles are a little like Facebook’s Lists (don’t worry if you’ve never seen those, they’re not clearly exposed to users) and Twitter’s Lists. Using Circles you can allocate contacts to Circles such as Family, Friends, Acquaintances and pretty much whatever you want to call the Circles.

    Google+ gives you a few ready-made Circles but you can create your own. Setting up Circles takes a bit of work because you need to go through your contacts and add them to whichever Circles you want to add them to. The interface is really slick and easy to use, even fun.

    Once the Circles are set up you have the option of publishing content to specific Circles or even specific individuals and this is where the brilliance comes in (at least as I see it). Before getting into Google+’s privacy paradigm, it’s a good idea to revisit the Facebook and Twitter privacy models.

    Facebook tends to push people to share more publicly. The defaults for its products tend to be more public than private and Facebook has made a few glaring mistakes where it has gone too far.

    Whether it be owing to enormous public outrage or an evolving sense of how to handle privacy issues, Facebook has improved its practices, but most users seem to be unaware of or unconcerned with the more granular privacy controls.

    The average user has few friends on Facebook and probably doesn’t think too much about the publicity issues and certainly doesn’t bother with lists. Despite the functionality being available on Facebook, few users actually use it and Facebook has pretty much buried it a couple layers down in the friends menus. That leaves many Facebook users left with a few choices: who to friend and what to share with those friends.

    Unless you only friend people who you are genuine friends of or are related to on Facebook, you may find yourself having friended people who you may not be comfortable sharing all your content with so you may elect not to share everything. While this probably hasn’t stifled Facebook’s growth, the model has limitations based on its structure and users’ preference to share more personal stuff on Facebook.

    Twitter, on the other hand, has two privacy/publicity options: public or private. Anything tweeted publicly is public and you have no legitimate expectation of privacy. It’s a little like standing on a street corner shouting out to whoever may be passing by. The private option is a little like going into a room and selectively allowing people inside to hear you speak.

    Twitter also has a Lists function which you can use to categorise Twitter users you follow. You can create your own lists and include whoever you may be following into those lists. As with your updates, lists can be public or private.

    I have a couple of lists which I have kept private because they are meant for me, not everyone else. Lists are handy for when you want to focus on a specific group of Twitter users. I may, for example, switch from my general Twitter stream to my Lawyers list to see what those lawyers are talking about rather than try to single out their posts in my general Twitter stream of more than 1 100 people who I am following at the moment.

    On Twitter you have two choices when it comes to publishing content: either publish your tweets to all your followers or don’t publish the tweet (you also have an option to direct message people on Twitter but it’s a one-to-one messaging system). There is no granularity. This binary choice means you may be reluctant to share something you only want certain people to see. That limits how you use Twitter.

    Circles borrows from the Facebook friends model and Twitter Lists. Using Circles you can limit your consumption and sharing to specific Circles or you can publish to the Public stream. Unlike with Facebook and Twitter you have quite a bit of control over who to share your posts with. The level of control Circles gives users may alleviate any anxiety about sharing stuff intended for a limited group of people.

    I prefer to limit visibility of my photos of my children to friends and family and it’s one of the main reasons why I am fairly selective about my Facebook friends. On Google+ I can share those photos with friends and family in one post and publish an interesting link or a few thoughts completely publicly in the next post. I have more control over who gets to see my posts.

    Moreover, users also have pretty granular control over their Circles’ visibility. This level of control makes Google+ far more attractive to users as a candidate for the one social network for all contexts. Google has said that Circles are based on real-world interactions in that we tend to segment our contacts contextually. We have colleagues, friends, family, hobbyists and so on.

    Circles creates the infrastructure to recreate those contextual groups in a social networking environment. It is also important to bear in mind that Google+ is the latest and most publicised of a number of updates Google has rolled out, and will be rolling out, to make the Google ecosystem itself a social platform.

    Google+ is also still in a limited field test and isn’t open to the public just yet so it remains to be seen whether it will gain traction with mainstream users. Regardless of whether it does attract a large user base, Google+ has demonstrated a very different privacy paradigm which addresses many of the criticisms levied against Facebook in the past.

    • Paul Jacobson is a Web and digital media lawyer who specialises in digital and social media-related law and is principal attorney at Jacobson Attorneys. This is edited version of an article that appeared in the Mail & Guardian and which was first published on webtechlaw.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 South Africa Licence — CC BY-SA 2.5 ZA.
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