Friday, February 1, 2019

Regret to Inform You...Google+ is Dead

Well, we knew it was coming.  The data breach coupled with low usage put the final nail in the Google+ coffin.  Today I officially received an email from Google stating,
You've received this email because you have a consumer (personal) Google+ account or you manage a Google+ page.
In December 2018, we announced our decision to shut down Google+ for consumers in April 2019 due to low usage and challenges involved in maintaining a successful product that meets consumers' expectations. We want to thank you for being part of Google+ and provide next steps, including how to download your photos and other content.
On April 2nd, your Google+ account and any Google+ pages you created will be shut down and we will begin deleting content from consumer Google+ accounts. Photos and videos from Google+ in your Album Archive and your Google+ pages will also be deleted. You can download and save your content, just make sure to do so before April. Note that photos and videos backed up in Google Photos will not be deleted.
 and,
If you've used Google+ for comments on your own or other sites, this feature will be removed from Blogger by February 4th and other sites by March 7th. All your Google+ comments on all sites will be deleted starting April 2, 2019. Learn more
What does this mean for blogging in general and the Palouse Wargaming Journal in particular?   

Since I did not use Google+ for blogging (well, at least I don't think I did), impact should be small.  One ramification of the demise of Google+ is that any comments created with Google+ (your own blog or another's blog) will be deleted.  Yikes!  How many Followers have left comments on PWJ using Google+?  I guess I will find out soon enough.  The second fall out regards photo storage.  If photos are stored on Google+, those are scheduled for deletion too. My.  It is hard to determine exactly where my photos are stored.  I hope all photos are stored on Blogger or Google.

48 comments:

DeanM said...

Hmm, very significant. Oh, I just saw that my comments are via Google. As you, Jonathan, I'm not sure how my photos are stored either. Guess we'll all find out in the coming months.

Klingula said...

It is a little annoying. I used Google for storage of links to useful articles in someone else's blogs. Now they will be gone 8(

Mad Padre said...

Can't say I used Google+ much, though I do worry sometimes that Google will kill Blogger one day, given the perception out there that blogging is a dying art form and has been supplanted by newer social media platforms.

L'Empereur said...

We hope not they kill Blogger !
:-(

Ed M said...

Never quite understood Google+, so stayed away from it, luckily. I share others' sense of concern for the future of Blogger.

Norm said...

It seems I am in good company. I don’t understand Google+ and ‘think’ I didn’t sign up when invited. I ‘think’ all my stuff will be okay, so just plan to go with the flow and see what joys April brings!

Ray Rousell said...

I used Google +, but not the commenting app. So I should be ok......I hope?

Dartfrog said...

I don't think it is too major as I use google photos for uploading. I never quite understood the advantage of proceeding through Google + as it seemed rather redundant to just following the blogs.

Neil Scott said...

I used Google+ and got my email today. Luckily my photos are already backed up

Jonathan Freitag said...

Good to see that I will not lose all of your commentary, Dean, when Google unplugs the app!

Yes, we will all find out what happens when the lights are turned off.

Jonathan Freitag said...

Annoying, it is. Hopefully, we will experience minimal disruption.

Jonathan Freitag said...

Let us hope Blogger continues a long and healthy life cycle! Blogging as a dying art form? I hope not!

Jonathan Freitag said...

A concern many of us share, for sure. We finally get used to newfangled technology and then it is taken away. Hardly sporting!

Jonathan Freitag said...

I do not think I signed up when invited either. It is the possible knock-on effects that trouble me.

Jonathan Freitag said...

I hope so, too! I would hate to lose your commentary.

Jonathan Freitag said...

I like your confidence! I use Google+ for some of the communities but nothing active outside of that interface to some interesting wargaming groups.

Jonathan Freitag said...

Good! You seem prepared for the Google+ retirement.

pancerni said...

I don't think I actually used the plus for anything. I know my blog and most comments here are just straight google. I hope.

The Jolly Broom Man said...

Thankfully Msr Foy warned me off it from the get go.

Jonathan Freitag said...

Then you are in good shape!

Jonathan Freitag said...

That was good advice! I know several blogs converted over to Google+ but I never did. If something is not broken, why fix it?

Christopher(aka Axebreaker) said...

I didn't use for my own blog, but I did use it for comments on other blogs that used the format. I just didn't like it and glad I didn't adopt it.

Christopher

Jonathan Freitag said...

I am with you, Christopher. I did not care for the Google+ commenting mechanism either.

Stew said...

I also never understood google plus either and haven’t used it. So no impact for me. 😀

Jonathan Freitag said...

That's good!

MSFoy said...

I swerved Google+ from the outset because it tried to force you to redefine your working environment, also because a friend of mine who works in the industry told me that it was basically intended to put Facebook out of business, and he reckoned it had no chance. Thus I am (probably more by luck rather than judgement) not a user, but since then I have been unable to follow or comment on any blogs which were Google+ based, so I'll be rather pleased to see it go. Not that Facebook couldn't use some pressure, mind you...

Thanks for sharing this - useful

Dartfrog said...

If the pictures were to go away, I have them backed up. Besides, it would just be another opportunity to catalog and inventory the collection.....

Jonathan Freitag said...

That sounds like a tremendous amount of rework. Doable, yes, but that would be a big undertaking.

Jonathan Freitag said...

Tony, I never was tempted to convert this blog to follow Google+ protocols either. As you say, it required a redefining of your environment. I did not want to be bothered with that either. Still, there were a number of interesting Google+ wargaming communities that I browsed.

I have been having trouble commenting on Google+ blogs late last fall but that issue seems to have been worked out. There were so many complaints about this "feature" Google must have finally been pressured to address it. A recent iOS update messed with commenting on blogs too. Gladly that has been fixed as well.

Michal DwarfCrypt said...

I use very "passionately" all groups at Google+ and it is a pity for me. Fortunately, I have my favorite blogs on my blogg roll :)

Lawrence H said...

I'm another who never really understood what it was about, which is no doubt part of the reason it failed. It just wasn't clear enough in terms of the benefits and what it was aimed at achieving.

Jonathan Freitag said...

I know you have been very active on Google+. Good luck in the transition.

Jonathan Freitag said...

Like you, I never quite grasped the benefits either.

caveadsum1471 said...

I always found it difficult to comment on Google+ so generally I didn't,there are quite a few blogs I like which are on Google+ which is worrying.
Best Iain

Chasseur said...

Another in the camp of not really understanding it, hopefully it doesn't affect my blog etc :)

Jonathan Freitag said...

Some blogs I follow are on Google+ too. We will see what happens when the Google+ machine's plug is pulled.

Jonathan Freitag said...

Many of us appear to be in the same camp. With some luck, we may weather this storm.

Mark Strachan said...

You would think I would be prepared for this type of eventuality since my day job centres on document control and building protections against data abd systems redundancy...but I am not. At least I have most of the original images so I can recreate much of the content if needed.

David Cooke said...

I used comments with google plus because it always seemed to be out of my control. As well searches that resulted in a google plus result always seemed confusing and unstructured to me. So I'm pretty pleased. :P

Jonathan Freitag said...

Let’s hope it does not come down to having to recreate all of your content. That would be a huge task.

Jonathan Freitag said...

David, since you commented with Google+, I wonder if all of your comments will disappear when the Great Lever is thrown to shut it down?

Dmitry Svidlo said...

I got the same notification. Likely l don’t use it much.

Terry Hooper-Scharf said...

Basically, if you want to post an image on your blog you get the choice of upload -from your computer, a url OR "this blog" and it states that all of the blog images are stored in Google Albums.For a lot of us bloggers it means we lose a lot of views each day and probably people in our "circle". Last time Google screwed up by making changes -the real reason they hit the skids because they changed Google plus so that you lost your views there -I had racked up over 2 million views -deleted without warning. What happens and how it affects bloggers we will need to wait and see.

Gonsalvo said...

I got the same notification, and although I have a Google plus account, I used it for very little. Thus I suspect and hope it will have minimal impact. We will see!

Facebook is not at all well suited to do what blogs do!

Jonathan Freitag said...

Thanks for the info, Terry!

Jonathan Freitag said...

I don’t use it much either.

Jonathan Freitag said...

We will see, indeed!

Phil Dutré said...

I got the same message, and wondered about the same thing (comments, images, ...). I decided not to worry and see where we end up.
I deleted my G+ account and files a few months ago, and have eliminated my account (I think :-)).

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