The New AOL.com Gets All Social and Stuff

Social networks are front and center in the latest redesign of AOL’s AOL.com homepage, which the company announced Thursday and says it will start to gradually roll out to users over the next few weeks (unless they choose to opt in earlier).

A widget (or module, or gadget, or whatever you want to call it) on the new AOL.com features a tabbed interface with updates from five different social-networking and messaging services: AOL’s own AIM and Bebo, MySpace, Twitter, and Facebook. Called “My Networks,” the tabs invite members to log into their social profiles and see a limited amount of information–feed and in-box updates from Facebook and MySpace, new Twitter messages, AIM status messages, etc.–as well as links to access the full versions of the apps.

The Facebook credentials, for example, come from the social network’s new Facebook Connect service, an extension of its developer API.

These are just the launch partners, AOL executive James Clark told CNET News last week, and more social-networking and messaging services will be added to the lineup over time. “(It’s) part of a consistent evolution of opening up,” Clark explained, pointing to AOL’s addition last month of outside email service alerts to AOL.com.

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comments so far. Add yours.

  • http://blog.macb.net Mac Beach

    Hopefully this downturn will put a lot of this social networking stuff out of its misery.

    I have or have had accounts on most of these services for as long as they’ve existed. Safely populated with fake names dates of birth etc.

    Problem is that everyone I’ve talked to about “linking-up” on these things is either totally disinterested or even more paranoid than I am about placing their actual personal information on the web.

    Most of the stories that come out about these things are not success stories, they are failure stories: Famous people being found out because they or some relative of their put too much info online.

    There is at best a niche market for this kind of stuff until the point in time when credit card, banking and personal records technology has been made totally foolproof, and I think that is a long way off.

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