Google has stepped up its data battle with Facebook by blunting the social networking site's app on its phones.
An update for its latest mobile operating system will see users' Facebook contacts disappear from the phone's address book.
Google said it took the action as it was no longer willing to exempt Facebook from its data-sharing rules.
The decision has been seen as indicative of growing tensions between the two internet giants.
The contact-altering update applies to the Gingerbread
version of Google's Android mobile operating system - currently only
available for the Nexus S and Nexus One handsets, which are manufactured
for Google.
Makers of other Android-based handsets are expected to make
the Gingerbread upgrade available to their users in the coming months.
If those mobiles use the same version of Gingerbread as the
Nexus phones, more owners would find Facebook contacts wiped from their
address book.
Originally, Facebook's Android app allowed users to populate the phone's address book with Facebook contacts.
However, that data could not be exported from the handset,
instead it was controlled by Facebook - something Google has said it can
no longer tolerate.
"Since Facebook contacts cannot be exported from the device,
the appearance of integration created a false sense of data
portability," Google said in a statement.
Facebook contacts will, however, remain accessible via the app.
More than 200 million people accessed Facebook via a mobile
device in 2010, according to its own figures - up from 65 million in the
previous year.
Advertising data
Google would benefit enormously from being able to export a user's Facebook contacts, said Mike Davis, a senior analyst at Ovum.
"There's an awful lot of information you can derive from analysing a contacts list," he said.
That information could be used to improve the targeting of adverts that Google publishes, he added.
The spat highlights the growing tension between Facebook and Google, said Mr Davis.
But, he predicted that Facebook is "unlikely to buckle" to Google's data sharing demands at this stage.
In late 2010, the two companies engaged in a similar data
quarrel over the sharing of contact data between
Facebook and Google's
Gmail web-based email system.
Facebook did not respond to requests for comment at the time of writing.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-12565527
No comments:
Post a Comment