I hate Google+. Can't stand it. It is agonizing to use. The stream is so noisy, it won't even bother me when the inevitable Google ads arrive. Culturally, it feels like walking into a religious school. It swarms with disciples of the + waiting for the messianic downfall of the Evil Internet, so that the One True Google+ is all that's left.
But I've been polite. It's my beat, so I've covered it fairly. When it gets a feature I love, I say so. When it does something obscenely bad, I give its creators a fair chance to respond. But it's getting harder to grin and bear it. I've been a happy Google customer product for a long time, because Google tools used to enhance the Internet. But as Google ships "the Google part" of its new Google+ identity, it's breaking the Web it once helped build. I can't take it anymore.
It all crystallized for me this morning when two Google+ transgressions presented themselves at once. Mike Elgan, "The world's only lovable technology columnist™," re-shared a post by Rohit Shrivastava, a manager at IBM. Elgan's post bore an awfully familiar headline, although the punctuation and capitalization had been maimed. It was familiar because I had written it. I didn't see any attribution, though, let alone a link to the story.
So I clicked 'Expand this post' on Shrivastava's part, and there was a giant chunk of my article copied and pasted into Google+ without a link. It had my name, at least, but that's it. Not even a '+ mention,' or whatever, of +ReadWriteWeb. I wanted to click through and get the link to Shrivastava's post, and I couldn't do that. So I thought, "WTF, Google+? Why can't I link to the original post? Is the popular kid's re-share of someone else's post more important?"
Then I remembered that public G+ posts count as websites now, as far as Google search is concerned. Furthermore, Google search now obscures natural Web results whenever possible, giving Google+ results from users' networks instead. And it hit me: True Believers of the Holy + might see this re-shared Google+ post of an almost-unattributed rip of my story instead of the original. Google+ hates the Internet!
Google+ Hates The Internet
That brought me back to an incident on December 24. I was on the iPad, not on my main machine, and I was logged in to my RWW Google Apps account, not my personal account. I don't use this account. It has no one in its circles, and no one has encircled it. I was trying to find a link to one of my posts. The quickest way to do that was to type 'jon mitchell jury duty' into the Google search bar.
To my astonishment, the post I wanted was not the first result. It was the third. Ranking above the result I wanted were two Google+ posts, one by me, and one by our webmaster Jared, that were nothing more than links to the article with brief comments. Google thought I would prefer to click through Google+ to find my article than to go straight to it.
I posted this screenshot on Google+ to see what my 8,000 … Followers? Plus-buddies? Plussers? +Friends? Friends+? Circlers? Encirclers? … To see what my 8,000 Encirclements thought. One comment (to which Google+ allows no way to link) said, "Yours is the top result when I search." I presume she meant the article itself. Well, that didn't make me feel much better, because it's just a reminder that Google is showing different Internets to different people.
But there were two comments I found even more disturbing (and again, Google+ will not allow me to link to them directly). One commenter said, "It's an algorithm. Get over yourself." Typical, orthodox devotion to the Almighty Google Algorithm and its Infallible Wisdom. Okay. But then another guy offered this gem:
"Speaking as a user/reader, to me the G+ version of your posting is more interesting than the readwriteweb.com version, because I can comment here without having to jump through hoops."
This might be the Googlest thing I've ever seen. First of all, he designates himself a "user/reader," which is just spectacular. And he goes on to say that he'd rather see a Google+ post about the article than the article itself, because, and I quote, "I can comment here without having to jump through hoops." Hoops like reading the article?
Google+ Is Social SEO
This darling "user/reader" has hit on the most touted feature of Google+: the conversations. Everybody finds it so much better than other forms of conversation on the Internet. It's okay, sure. You can't link to comments, but it's not bad. It lets you make things bold and italic. That's pretty neat.
But never forget that you're Google's product, not its customer. Why does Google want to facilitate long, riveting conversations on Google+ (with only one permalink, so the search results don't get confusing)? Exactly. For the same reason blogs allow comments, despite the outrageous overhead of fighting spam. Traffic and search engine optimization.
Google+ is the new SEO. Just look at what it's done to Google News. In the name of highlighting authors, it now pulls in Google+ profiles. It doesn't let the author choose, say, her own website as her profile. If she wants a clickable, personal link on Google News, she has to use Google+.
Google does all this in the name of personalization. The public face of this effort is Amit Singhal, who presents personalization as this crucial element of context. Google can better figure out what a query means to each user if it has social signals, his story goes.
But my query for "jon mitchell jury duty" didn't mean "Show me what my Friends+ are saying about 'jon mitchell jury duty.'" It meant "Show me Jon Mitchell's article about jury duty!" The Google of a year ago would have known that. All this personalization and real-time stuff surely helps Google organize its content, but it's breaking search.
Read the rest at RWW.