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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Google takes new swing at social networking

Jessica Guynn Los Angeles Times

SAN FRANCISCO — Can Google Inc. make friends?

The Internet search giant, whose goal is to organize information, will try to organize people with a social networking service designed to rival the growing influence of Facebook Inc.

Google+ is the company’s most ambitious effort yet to keep Web users and advertising dollars from straying to social networking sites.

The project, which Google has been quietly working on for months, has been championed by Google co-founder Larry Page, who, even before taking over as chief executive in April, made social networking a priority.

The move comes as Facebook, which generates $29 billion in annual revenue, threatens to dethrone Google as the Web’s most popular destination. Google has moved too slowly to counter Facebook, industry observers say. Eric Schmidt, Google’s CEO for a decade before Page took over the role, said this month that he “screwed up” on social networking. “I clearly knew I had to do something, and I failed to do it,” he said.

The social networking bid comes as Google faces increased scrutiny from federal regulators over its business practices and from investors worried about unprecedented spending and hiring. The company’s shares have slid nearly 20 percent this year over concerns that its growth rate has slowed.

Google is also under fire from Oracle Corp., which is seeking billions of dollars in damages in a patent and copyright infringement case in San Francisco federal court. The case involves Google’s Android software, which is licensed to mobile device makers.

And Microsoft Corp. said Tuesday that it was rolling out an online version of its Office software suite to counter Google Apps, software that enables users to edit and store documents and emails on remote servers accessible from anywhere.

Though Google websites, including YouTube, trump all others — drawing more than 1 billion visitors in May — people are spending more time on Facebook, according to research firm ComScore. The average U.S. visitor spent 375 minutes on Facebook in May compared with 231 minutes for Google.

So Google is trying to more tightly weave itself into Web users’ daily experience. It envisions Google+ as a foundation on which it can more seamlessly connect people to all of its products and services.

Google+ is similar to Facebook with streaming updates of photos, messages and other items shared with groups of friends that users designate. It also has group texting and video chat services, and Google executives said more features are planned. It’s currently available by invitation only and open to a limited number of users who are trying out the service.

On the Web, where so many services compete for time and attention, Google is trying to exploit a perceived weakness of Facebook: privacy. Google said that with its service users can “share just the right things with just the right people.”