Google Fights Facebook, Microsoft in Social Search | eWeek

Google Fights Facebook, Microsoft in Social Search

Written By
Clint Boulton
Clint Boulton
Oct 16, 2010
3 minute read
eWeek content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More

Microsoft and Facebook have temporarily one-upped Google in social search with their new integration, but Google isn’t going quietly.

Facebook Oct. 13 agreed to open its data feeds to let Microsoft’s Bing search engine index and serve profile information and Liked Results in relevant situations.
The integration goes well beyond what Google has done with its own Social Search functionality, which lacks a large, cohesive network of user data.
The Facebook-Bing deal, then, is a big stepping stone to boosting social advertising, IDC analyst Hadley Reynolds told eWEEK.
“[Bing] can leverage the social info it lacked to keep people on their sites longer, with more exposure to ad inventory and the business it generates.”
Google recognizes this as much as any other company. On Google’s third-quarter earnings call Oct. 14, Google CEO Eric Schmidt was asked about how Google will capture signals in social search without accessing data feeds similar to the deal Bing has struck with Facebook.
Schmidt paused a few seconds and noted that Google is careful about how its signals are assembled, but said there “are ways in which we could do that.”
“We also have in development other ways in which people can give us that sort of information that can make it even more personal,” Schmidt said.
Schmidt was clearly referring to Google’s supposed Google Me project to socialize its search and Web service properties in many layers.
If that sounds like a veiled challenge to Bing and Facebook, it is. Schmidt has made no secret about Google’s disdain for one-to-one arrangements where one company cedes data to another but not to the Web at large. He’s also intimated he would like access to Facebook’s data.
“There is always a concern that large, private collections of the data are not accessible to Web search engines,” Schmidt said.
“We’ve taken the position in a religious and business perspective that the world is better off if you take the info you’re assembling and make it searchable; it provides a larger audience and drives more traffic to your site.”
Unfortunately for Google, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is hardly in a rush to release Facebook data to any more search engines at this point.
That puts Google on the outside looking in, Altimeter Group analyst Charlene Li told eWEEK.
“This is not a knock-out punch to Google, but it is significant that they are not the leaders in social search-Bing + Facebook are,” Li said.
“Although [Bing] don’t have the mass and scale to have an impact on Google, the fact that they have already gained ground over the past year is indicative that Google has vulnerabilities.”
Another scary prospect for Google about the Facebook-Bing thing: Both Bing officials and Zuckerberg himself noted this new social search functionality is just a first step toward making search more useful, personalized and relevant using searchers’ social graphs.
“As more people collect, post, share and add more ‘likes’ and social content, the value of social search will improve,” Forrester Research analyst Augie Ray told eWEEK.

eWeek Logo

eWeek has the latest technology news and analysis, buying guides, and product reviews for IT professionals and technology buyers. The site's focus is on innovative solutions and covering in-depth technical content. eWeek stays on the cutting edge of technology news and IT trends through interviews and expert analysis. Gain insight from top innovators and thought leaders in the fields of IT, business, enterprise software, startups, and more.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2026 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.