Latest News:  

English>>Business

Facebook unveils social search feature

(Shanghai Daily)

10:19, January 17, 2013

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has unveiled a new search feature that's designed to entice people to spend more time on his company's website and will put the world's largest online social network more squarely in competition with Google and other rivals such as Yelp and LinkedIn.

Called "graph search," the new service unveiled on Tuesday lets users quickly sift through their social connections for information about people, interests, photos and places. It'll help users who, for instance, want to scroll through all the photos their friends have taken in Paris or search for the favorite TV shows of all their friends who happen to be doctors.

Although Zuckerberg stressed that "graph search" is different from an all-purpose search engine, the expanded feature escalates an already fierce duel between Google Inc and Facebook Inc as they grapple for the attention of web surfers and revenue from online advertisers.

"This could be another reason not to use Google and another reason to stay on Facebook for longer periods," said Gartner analyst Brian Blau. "I don't think Google is going to lose its search business, but it could have an impact on Google by changing the nature of search in the future."

Facebook's foray into search marks one of its boldest steps since its initial public offering of stock flopped eight months ago amid concerns about the company's ability to produce the same kind of robust earnings growth that Google delivered after it went public in 2004.

Although Facebook's stock has rallied in recent weeks, the company's shares remain below their IPO price of US$38.

If the new search tool works the way Facebook envisions, users should be able to find information they want to see on their own instead of relying on the social network's formulas to pick which posts and pictures to display in their fees, analysts said.

Until now, Facebook users were unable to search for friends who live in a certain town or like a particular movie. With the new feature, people can search for friends who, say, live in Boston who also like "Zero Dark Thirty." And Facebook's users will be able to enter search terms the same way that they talk, relying on natural language instead of a few stilted keywords to telegraph their meaning.

Only a fraction of Facebook's more than 1 billion users will have access to the new search tool beginning on Tuesday because the company plans to gradually roll it out during the next year to allow time for more fine tuning.

Not all the interests that people share on Facebook will be immediately indexed in the search engine either, although the plan is to eventually unlock all the information in the network while honoring each user's privacy settings.

That means users can only see content that's available to them through other's privacy settings, Zuckerberg pledged.

"Every piece of content has its own audience," he said.

Though the company has focused on refining its mobile product for much of last year, the search feature will only be available on Facebook's website for now, and only in English.

We recommend:

Online turnover surpasses 1 trillion yuan in 2012

Jack Ma to step down as Alibaba CEO

FDI sees 1st decrease in 9 years amid slowdown

China helps drive Rolls to record year

Top Ten Economic Events in 2012

CIC seeks balanced portfolio

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:厉振羽、张洪宇)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Confrontation drill in Yunnan province

  2. PLA army aviation brigade in flight training

  3. What is behind the weather extremes?

  4. Beijingers see first sunshine in seven days

  5. Cities surrounded by pollution

  6. Schoolmaster killed in heroic fight

  7. Corruption curbs crimp luxury market

  8. 'La Traviata' staged in Shanghai

  9. Laboleng Temple getting facelift

  10. Happier being single? Some signs are

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Taxi shortage means passengers are fare game
  2. Commentary: Soldiers should prepare for war
  3. Will rural residents become middle-class?
  4. Taxi drivers' plight leaves passengers out in the cold
  5. China Voice: Living better or living green?
  6. Families of migrant workers are least happy in 2012
  7. Japan’s hopes to contain China laughable
  8. Sino-Indian ties
  9. Li pledges measures in fight for clean air
  10. A competent ‘general’ is also a good ‘platoon leader’

What’s happening in China

'Sister House' case urges efforts in combating corruption in affordable housing

  1. The latest 'drug chicken' scandal
  2. Shanghai plagued by heavy pollution
  3. 'Family feud dramas' concern TV viewers
  4. Will rural residents become middle-class?
  5. Corruption curbs crimp luxury market