šŸŽŸļø Get up to 3 FREE tickets with every group order! Book by 29 March to redeem ā†’

This article was published on July 20, 2011

Google should have worked on social earlier, admits Schmidt


Google should have worked on social earlier, admits Schmidt

Googleā€™s executive chairman Eric Schmidt believes the company should have focused more on connecting its users, to compete with market-leading Facebook before it became the worldā€™s most popular social network, he revealed in an interview with CNN.

Schmidt said that Facebook has succeeded because it had ā€œworked out who people areā€ and that the system was fundamentally missing from the Internet:

What Facebook has done is built a way to figure out who people are. That system is missing in the internet as a whole. Google should have worked on this earlier.

I think thatā€™s the area where I would have put more resources, developing these identity services and ranking systems that go along with that. That would have made a big difference for the internet as a whole.

The search giant launched its own social network Google+ just under a month ago, introducing an invite-only system to test the platform before it will roll-out the service to the public.

The service isnā€™t the first time Google has attempted to introduce social services, having previously debuted bought Jaiku, Orkut and introduced Google Buzz, the latter landing the company in hot water over privacy leaks.

The šŸ’œ of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It's free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

Despite a phased roll-out, Google has already added 10 million members and continues to grow as the search giant begins to mobilze a campaign to encourage celebrities to join and promote the social network.

ā€œThe lesson to be learned in high tech, you need to move through these new phenomena very quickly and you need to get the details right. Otherwise youā€™re left behind,ā€ Schmidt said.

Schmidt is currently touring Asia, a market where Googleā€™s Android operating system has struggled to gain traction. Speaking at a Google conference on Tuesday, Schmidt commented on the recent increase in mobile lawsuits, suggesting that Googleā€™s rivals ā€“ most notably Apple ā€“ ā€œarenā€™t innovating, theyā€™re responding with lawsuits,ā€ are threatened by its competition and are doing so to shut down companies like HTC and Samsung are their fastest growing rivals.

You can watch the full CNN interview in the player embedded below:

Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.

Also tagged with