PC World reported that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wants to sit down with Google and work out the privacy issues that caused Facebook to block Google’s Friend Connect last week, he said Monday.
“We want to talk to Google about this and see if there’s a way we can make it work,” said Zuckerberg at a news conference in Tokyo. He was in the Japanese capital to launch the a local-language version of the social networking site.
Google Friend Connect allows Web site operators to add social networking functions to their Web sites. Users visiting the sites will be able to interact with new people or existing friends from social networking sites like Facebook, Orkut and Plaxo. It’s the possibility of data redistribution to third-party sites by Google that caused Facebook to block access, it said last week. It seems like Mr. Zuckerberg has gotten flak for that decision and is seeking a way out of the corner into which he had backed himself, and so he was conciliatory, to a degeree. “They launched that without asking us or talking to us about it first so we had no choice but to follow the rules that we had set forth for any developer on top of our platform and we followed them,” said Zuckerberg. “But Google’s a big player in the space and they make good things and our goal is to work with them to figure this out.”
Filed under: Facebook, Google | Tagged: Facebook, Google, Google Friend Connect, Mark Zuckerberg