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Facebook denies Google access to its customers’ identities.

Article courtesy of my friend Michael Arrington, TechCrunch

More details on Facebook’s banning of Google Friend Connect from the Facebook API earlier today. I spoke with Facebook Chief Privacy Officer Chris Kelly and Google’s Director of Engineering David Glazer about the banning to get a fuller picture of the conflict.

Here’s an example of how Friend Connect (more details) works in practice. A third party site may want to add social elements to their service. They can integrate with Friend connect and allow users to sign in. Those users choose a social network where they keep their profile (Orkut, Hi5, GTalk and, until today, Facebook) and log in via the social network’s API. They then become “members” of the site, using Google’s terminology. If any of their friends from their social network also become members of that site, those friends are shown on the site and you can interact with them. To see it for yourself, click “log in” at the top of this sample site, IngridMichaelson.

Facebook has taken the proper stance to maintain its $15 billion valuation by limiting access to its customers’ identities on third-party websites. Facebook aspires to be the social network where customers can broadcast their true identity, and that requires a level of trust between Facebook and its customers. To gain this trust, Facebook allows its customers excellent control over which other users can view their Facebook profile, and how much of the Facebook profile is visible to those users. Facebook continues to earn the trust of its customers; evidenced by its heavy usage, and it would be irresponsible of the Company to allow third-party websites access to its customers’ identities.


Posted on May 15th, 2008 | By: David Litsky | Filed under Web Technologies


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