Andrew Bonwick
Vice President of Product Development at Relm Insurance
Madhav Sheth
CEO of Ai+ Smartphone
Stephen Rose
CEO Render Networks

Google+ is the latest service of Google to see the end of life. Late night on Monday, Google announced that it’s shutting down its social networking platform, Google+ after a technical glitch was found to have compromised accounts and personal information of over 5,00,000 of its users. Google also stated that the platform is seeing less interest from users, which is another reason why it decided to end the road. The announcement in this regard was made by Ben Smith, Google Fellow and vice-president of engineering, in a blog post Monday, in which he noted that the Indian-American headed company could not confirm which users were impacted by the bug.

Google Ran a Detailed Analysis for Patching the Bug
“However, we ran a detailed analysis over the two weeks prior to patching the bug, and from that analysis, the profiles of up to 500,000 Google+ accounts were potentially affected. Our analysis showed that up to 438 applications might have used this API,” he said.
“We found no evidence that any developer was aware of this bug or abusing the API, and we found no evidence that any profile data was misused,” Smith said.
The technical bug was detected as part of an effort called Project Strobe started by Google early this year. It is a root-and-branch review of third-party developer access to Google accounts and Android device data and of our philosophy around apps’ data access, he wrote.
“This project looked at the operation of our privacy controls, platforms where users were not engaging with our APIs because of concerns around data privacy, areas where developers may have been granted overly broad access, and other areas in which our policies should be tightened,” Smith said.