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Death of Google+ greatly exaggerated, says its chief

Yes, Google is spinning off the troubled social network's popular photo features. But that doesn't mean Google+ is going bye-bye, says its product VP.

Richard Nieva Former senior reporter
Richard Nieva was a senior reporter for CNET News, focusing on Google and Yahoo. He previously worked for PandoDaily and Fortune Magazine, and his writing has appeared in The New York Times, on CNNMoney.com and on CJR.org.
Richard Nieva
2 min read

Google announced a new photo app separate from its social network. James Martin/CNET

SAN FRANCISCO -- For everyone who's been on Google+ deathwatch, the search giant says that's not necessary.

Google's embattled social network is alive and well, the product's boss said at a press event Thursday. But the team behind the product -- which has had trouble gaining traction with consumers -- is rethinking the goal of the service.

"Google+ will be changing," Bradley Horowitz said during an event at Google's annual I/O conference for software developers. "There's a renaissance in the thinking of what Google+ is, and what it's for."

The social network's future was called into question when Google announced, earlier in the day, a new service called Google Photos, which turned Google+'s photo features into a standalone app. The social network never caught on with consumers like rival Facebook -- the world's largest social network -- or even younger offerings like Snapchat, but the product's photo features were always well received. Stripping away the service from Google+ made some people question the company's commitment to the social network.

The move comes as Google makes a push to become the software maker that touches every part of consumers' lives. The company's software powers everything from smartphones to car dashboards to TVs.

Google's Photo service enters a race that has heated up over the past several months. Dropbox has a photo storage app called Carousel, and Yahoo earlier this month overhauled its Flickr service. The redesign includes more-advanced search features designed to make it easier to sort through photos.

Google's service also has a big focus on categorization. The app -- which gives consumers unlimited storage space -- automatically sorts pictures, so family photos, say, are grouped in a different place from receipts for your expense reports.

So why separate the photo features from Google+? Bradley said the social network has a new mission: to connect people based on shared interests. Earlier this month, Google announced a new feature for the product called Collections, which is similar to what rival Pinterest does with its online bulletin boards.

When Bradley looked at Google+'s photo features, he thought they didn't fit with the product. "It's not clear that personal-photos management is aligned with the mission of Google+," he said.

"The number of photos we share is a small percentage of the photos we take," he said.