As a follow-up to the post on Google Picasa's facial recognition software, there are other new potential Google products that are raising privacy concerns.

A Google spokesperson announced this week a patent application that will rank social network users based on their influence, measured by metrics that would include how many people visited their profile, number of friends, and how active they were on the site.

The product would even track how frequently people post on sites and how successful they are in getting others to read or watch things that they post. Ranking could also be based on the Google's patented PageRank algorithm.

Top ranked individuals would then be targeted for special advertisements based on observed content.

David Harry of HuoMah identifies four distinct Google patents that would accomplish this:

Google Australia spokesman Rob Shilkin said that there's no cause for alarm quite just yet,

We file patent applications on a variety of ideas that our employees come up with. Some of those ideas later mature into real products or services, some don't.

Prospective product announcements should not necessarily be inferred from our patent applications.

It's expected that the new system could give Google a competitive advantage over Microsoft in online advertising. Heather Green of BusinessWeek indicates that Google has had financial difficulty monetizing from social networks in the past.

But with every threat there is also an opportunity. Lawyers actively engaging in social media with large networks might also be able to directly affect search engine rankings for legal related content, increasing their worth to clients and law firms alike.

Omar Ha-Redeye is a Toronto lawyer focusing on health law and reputation management. He has a background in Nuclear Medicine Technology, Health Management and Public Relations.
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One Comment on “You’re Not Paranoid, You Really Could Be Watched”

  1. Dave says:

    Hi there… Dave here… thanks for the interest ;0)

    While there are applications for the system based on private data (ie; likely OpenSocial implications), for the most part it is targeted at largely 'Open' data that is publicly available. That would make it a tough go for privacy advocates. And to be honest, it's not the only application of it's kind. Small folks and larger (Microsoft) have also published these kinds of targeting methods.

    As for the 'influencer targeting' aspect, that seems to be but one part of the system… sort of like plugging in a PR score in the larger ranking scheme. The influencer score/tag would be but one part of the targeting process. People seem to be paying undo attention to this one cog. But it is the easiest to 'hype', thus makes for good press.

    Anyway, thanks for the interest… they were some interesting patents to go through…

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