Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Legacy Archives

Google navigation addition is not Google +1

Add as a preferred source on Google

socialIf you noticed an addition to your Google account pages recently, you weren’t the only one. Last week, Google introduced a new feature of its page that displays a users’ account name and lets them access their settings, various folders, and easily log out. It’s a pretty minimal update, but seeing as we’ve all become so hungry for the massively delayed Google social project, this seemed like a sign.

Turns out we were all reaching. After widespread speculation this was indeed the first implementation in a Google social layer to be incrementally introduced, the Cupertino company is setting the record straight. Google explains that the addition is nothing more than a way for users to make sure what account they are logged in under when using various Google applications. For instance, if you’re wanting to share a document under your company’s account, it makes it immediately obvious how you are logged in and if you need to switch.

Recommended Videos

It’s also meant to help users who want to keep some information from being associated with their name. According to a blog post from director of privacy Alma Whitten, “sometimes you want the web without having your online activity tied to your identity…perhaps when you’re researching a medical condition.”

On the plus side, it’s another step toward user privacy for Google. Clearly, there’s been contention when it comes to this in the past and the company isn’t taking any chances. Unfortunately, it means there’s still little to no progress on Google +1 (if that’s even your real name, Google social project!). It’s starting to feel like maybe Google’s trying to kill its alleged social feature, and is just waiting until all the media hype dies down and we forget about it.

Molly McHugh
Former Social Media/Web Editor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
Topics
You can now generate songs in your iMessage chats
iMessage users can now turn chats into short AI-generated songs
Text, Business Card, Paper

Suno has added an iMessage extension to its iOS app, letting users generate 30-second songs from voice recordings or typed prompts inside a Messages conversation.

The feature is available in the latest version of the Suno app and requires both people in the chat to have it installed. Users can access Suno from the plus menu in Messages, create a track, and share it without opening the standalone app.

Read more
The UK just proposed a midnight social media curfew for teens that they can bypass in seconds
The government wants 16- and 17-year-olds off apps like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube from midnight to 6 AM, but the restriction has a built-in workaround.
Girl using a black phone while lying down

The UK just proposed a midnight social media curfew for teenagers, but it comes with a built-in escape hatch. According to the BBC, the UK government plans to restrict social media access for 16- and 17-year-olds between midnight and 6 AM, preventing them from using apps like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. But getting around it will take nothing more than a few taps.

A curfew teens can switch off

Read more
X is teaching its AI algorithm something social networks once understood
A new ranking tweak gives mutuals more visibility after X found that friendship data was missing from an algorithm shaping who appears in replies
Twitter X Logo Featured

X has discovered a bold new strategy for making social media feel social again. It’s going to show your posts more often to people you actually know.

According to X product head Nikita Bier, the platform is boosting the visibility of posts among mutuals, meaning accounts that follow each other. He said this relationship data had been missing from the algorithm, leaving familiar accounts less visible when reply sections filled up.

Read more