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20.7.11

Disadvantage G+

G+ Suspend user's 

If you need to temporarily disable access to an account, you can suspend the user. Suspending a user disables the account without deleting the user profile and their related information, such as documents, calendar events, and email. A user cannot sign in to a suspended account, and new information, such as emails and calendar invitations, are blocked. The account can be restored at any time by re-enabling a suspended user account.

 Screen Shot:
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To suspend a user:
  1. Find the user account. There are a few alternative ways to find a user account:
    • Enter the user's email address in the search box at the top of the Google Apps control panel, then click Search accounts.
    • From the Dashboard page, click the Email link, then Email addresses.
    • Click the Organization & users tab, then select the organizational unit to which the user belongs.
  2. Under Users, click the user name to display the account information.
  3. In the top right corner, click Suspend user.
  4. Click ok in the confirmation box.
To confirm that a user is suspended, click the Organization & users tab, and check the Status column to see if the user is marked as Suspended.
Note: A suspended user’s profile remains in the directory contacts list and is visible to everyone in your domain. To block this information, you can hide a user from the shared contacts list. 
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Google Plus profile suspended Discussion ;

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 Re-enable a suspended user account 

There are two types of suspended accounts, as indicated by the user account Status:
  • Suspended accounts have been temporarily disabled by a domain administrator.
  • Abusive accounts have been suspended by Google due to a violation of the Google Terms of Service (e.g. exceeded bandwidth or sending limits).
To re-enable a user account:
  1. On the Organization and users page, select the user's organization on the left, then find the user in the user list and check their Status field.
  2. If the status is Suspended, click the name of the user to display the user information page, then click Restore user.
  3. If the account status is Abusive, you can contact support to investigate or possibly reset limits.
Related topics

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Google can detect, know, recording, and rising up a web page that has numbers on its Google Plus One. That means there are internet users who like, voting or giving value the web page by clicking on the Google Plus One button. The more the number of the Google Plus One, the more well-known the site in search engine Google  with certain keywords, in other words, Google will be rising up the web page at very top of the SERP (Search Engine Results Page).

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Google Plus is more about preserving leadership, than having own social network

New York: Google didn't build its new Plus service simply to have an online hangout like Facebook.
Rather, Google's new social-networking endeavour is about trying to gain valuable insights into people's lives and relationships. This could help the company do a better job of targeting ads so that advertisers would pay more and have less reason to spend their money on Facebook.
If it succeeds, Plus represents Google's best shot yet at muscling into a market that has threatened to topple the Internet search and advertising leader, as Facebook leads the way in making the online world social.

Google didn't build its new Plus service simply to have an online hangout like Facebook.

 

Plus is Google's carefully scripted venture into a territory where its previous efforts have been duds.
On the surface, Plus is reminiscent of Facebook - with a Google touch. It lets people share photos and status messages, chat with friends and acquaintances and follow news updates. A prominent feature called circles allows users to organize the people they interact with into groups, such as family, close friends or fishing buddies. Users can choose to share things only among certain circles.

Google Plus is still in a restricted, test phase, and invites to join are highly coveted. Only time will tell if it takes off among the broader public or if it's too little, too late to face off with Facebook and Twitter on the social front - just as Microsoft has failed to surpass Google in search with latecomer Bing.

Google Inc. has done quite well without its own social network. Its online search engine accounts for two-thirds of queries made in the US, and even more in parts of Europe. Its revenue is expected to surpass $36 billion this year, the bulk of it from text ads that appear alongside search results and other Web content. Google reports its latest quarterly results Thursday.

Online behaviours are changing, though. People are spending more time on Facebook and other social networks. They are increasingly relying on their friends' recommendations when deciding where to eat and what movies to watch.

Google, meanwhile, has bungled past social media efforts. A sharing program called Wave was quickly killed off because users didn't know what to make of it. Buzz, a later venture, was the centre of a privacy fiasco. Google had been too aggressive about automatically creating circle of friends, which inadvertently revealed whom they've corresponded with on Gmail.

Early response to Google Plus has been positive. But that's no guarantee for broader success. As Google botched one social media effort after another, Facebook grew exponentially.

Today, half of Facebook's 750 million worldwide users log on to the site every day. That's roughly the entire population of the US and UK combined. More than 250 million people engage with Facebook in some form on outside websites each month around the world. They do this by clicking the ubiquitous "like" and "recommend" buttons on news and other sites or by logging on to websites using their Facebook passwords.
Google's chairman and former CEO, Eric Schmidt, has acknowledged that the company failed to respond to Facebook's threat fast enough. His successor, Google co-founder Larry Page, has made social networking one of his top priorities since he took over in April.

"We don't think it's a coincidence that (Google Plus) was introduced less than three months after Page returned to the CEO post," said Standard & Poor's equity analyst Scott Kessler in a note to clients.
Facebook's greatest advantage is the immense trove of information that its users have shared about themselves through about 4 billion posts and connections they make collectively every day. Facebook knows what people are reading, eating and watching. It knows who's friends with whom, and which friends people trust for recommendations on what shoes to buy and which plumbers to hire.

Google can't index most of this information on its search engine because Facebook doesn't share it. Instead, Facebook has formed a search partnership with Google rival Microsoft Corp. In May, Microsoft's Bing search engine started to use information from people's Facebook preferences to tweak its search results. This means Facebook users who search for shoes or concert tickets on Bing might get results that are tailored to the interests they listed on the site. For people who aren't logged on to Facebook when they search, Microsoft's search engine might still emphasize links that other Facebook users have recommended.

That puts Google at a disadvantage. Unless it can get similar data through a social service of its own, Google is left with a formula that sorts through the pattern of Web links and other computer data to determine where a site should rank in its recommendation. The system has become increasingly vulnerable to manipulation by websites looking to rank higher than their rivals. As a result, Google search results might not be as useful as recommendations drawn from an analysis of what they have already signalled that they like by pressing a Facebook button.

There's another key way that social data can help Google.
On Facebook, companies can target their advertising with razor-sharp precision given all sorts of information that people willingly share, such as a preference for Coke over Pepsi or whether they've ever been married. For example, they can show a particular Cheetos ad only to single men aged 17 to 41 who live in New York, are Yankee fans and enjoy the World of Warcraft video game.
"That's Facebook's biggest calling card to marketers," said Debra Aho Williamson, principal analyst with eMarketer.

Advertisers are typically willing to pay more for such targeting because they'd be pitching to consumers most likely to buy. Google does a good job already of targeting ads based on what people search for, write about in emails and watch on YouTube. Social data could help Google do even better.
Danny Sullivan, who follows Google closely as editor-in-chief of the website Search Engine Land, said that if Google Plus succeeds, Google would get "a good insurance policy" amid the rise of social networks.
The need for it became apparent when Google's deal to include Twitter updates in its search results expired recently, Sullivan said. Google has temporarily shut down its "RealTime" search feature, though it told users to stay tuned while it explores how Google Plus will figure into it.

That said, Google Plus doesn't necessarily need to be a Facebook clone.
"Google needs to have a social strategy that is relevant to Google and the way people use Google applications," said Susan Etlinger, analyst at Altimeter Group. "That's very different from how people use Facebook."

Facebook is, for now, an online hangout above all. People go there to scan status updates, chat with a friend or look at the latest photos, without necessarily having something specific in mind.

With Google, people usually have an objective, whether that's searching for a hair stylist or sending an email about an upcoming party. Google's task is to make its existing products social as "social" becomes the norm for online activity, she said.

"Eventually everything is going to be a social network," Etlinger said. "Social capabilities will be in everything on the Web."

1 comment:

Admin said...

my google plus account: *moegirlwiki@gmail.com*

I don't know why you think my name violates google‘s Community
Standards
.
I use the name "萌娘百科的更新姬" in many place, now everybody see the name
"萌娘百科的更新姬", they know it's me.
For example:
http://weibo.com/moegirlwiki (chinese)
http://t.qq.com/moegirlwiki (chinese)

This is MY account. It's only use by myself.


I think suspended my account without any notify is really offensive!

You are doing evil!

Even the website in autocratic China will send you a notify before forbid
your account. I can't believe google forbid my account without any notify!
After the suspended , you just give some very fuzzy words. I don't know how
to change my account to fit your " Community Standards"

I send many form by this page :"
http://www.google.com/support/profiles/bin/request.py?hl=en&contact_type=name_appeal&rd=1"
NO REPLY!

And then I change my name to my real name "姬新更", STILL NO REPLY!

This is not the google speed, that's really Disappointing.

Please! Reactive my plus account: moegirlwiki@gmail.com

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