Thursday, June 23, 2011

Google ‘Inner Circles’ its next stab at social?


Google seems to grasping at straws, trying to introduce something resembling a social network. But newly revealed code shows that it might have some big plans to get there.

Right before the social networking holiday that is SXSW, a rumor about a product called Google Circles surfaced. It claimed that a major social platform was about to be introduced and it would include the works: Photo sharing services, a video application, and status posts. It would have been a big, huge step for Google – but it wasn’t true. Google swiftly crushed the rumor, saying it didn’t exist.

This was confusing, seeing as Tim O’Reilly, something of an industry authority, told AllThingsD he had seen Google Circles and that “it looks awesome.” Since then, there’s been no talk of Google Circles. Social Circles, on the other hand, has been around since the early days of Buzz, but it’s a beast of a different nature and definitely not the fully-featured social platform Google allegedly had in mind at one point in time.


We were about ready to throw in the towel on such a service from Google. It’s been looking more and more like Google is going the way of a layered approach to social: A feature here, a service there, rounding itself out as a platform that happens to have some social elements to its various other applications. But Google Circles has resurfaced, this time thanks to some code Austrian blogger Florian Rohrweck noticed and sent over to The Next Web. The code mentions “Google Circles” repeatedly, and it looks like it has something to do with managing your Google contacts and mentions of being able to create “public followers” and “private contacts.” Users will also be able to +1 Buzz comments, which is mostly noteworthy because it means Google is keeping Buzz around.

What intrigues us that Rohrwerk says there was mention of something called “Typhoon” in the code, which makes us think it could be related to that top-secret project called “Emerald Sea.” Maybe Google has some big scheme to loop its social elements together in a more concrete way than we thought.