Bing Denies Copying RockMelt Browser Facebook Features
Microsoft's Bing Bar aims to do the kind of Facebook integration not seen since the RockMelt browser from last year.
Less than a month after Google accused Microsoft's Bing search engine of copying search results, Bing revamped its toolbar with Facebook functionality that duplicates a lot what RockMelt does in its Web browser. RockMelt launched its Google Chrome-based browser in November, offering several nifty features that let users access their Facebook and other content from toolbars that bracket the browser window.Bing agreed in a statement to eWEEK, stressing that it did not copy RockMelt in trying to aggregate popular things people do online, from Facebook to e-mail and games: "Toolbars have always been about bringing important Web content to customers in an easily accessible way, alongside search. The Bing Bar is no different. As we set out to build it, we looked at what people are doing online each day and included those items that would make the toolbar most useful for customers. We did not copy an existing service." To that end, the new Bing Bar continues the company's integration with Facebook by providing users with access to their Facebook content without whisking them away from Bing to the social network. Bing in fact just augmented its Facebook Liked results to annotate any Web URLs, not just those shared by friends. It was a tacit acknowledgement that people don't want social search done by the search engines who lack organic social networks, which is the way Google has approached the task to date. Rather, users want to access what they and their friends are familiar with. That would be Facebook, which boasts more than 600 million users. That brings up an interesting question about Google. While RockMelt and Bing huddle close to Facebook, does Google, which hired dozens of social software experts in 2010, have the chops to challenge Facebook without tapping into Facebook? It's unclear, but Google +1, the company's social software layer cake, appears to be the search engine's bid to do just that, making for an exciting social showdown in 2011.








