Google has added some new privacy controls to
Google+ to give business users a more secure way to share sensitive
information on the social network. On Tuesday the company added
"restricted communities" to Google+, as a way to have conversations on
the social network but with privacy-aware controls. Users can decide
whether to open the community to everyone at their company, or open only
on an invite basis.
Communities in Google+ were designed to let
people start conversations around any number of topics. But Google hopes
the new feature will attract business users without them worrying about
spilling company secrets on the site.
"At most organizations,
it's important to make sure that private conversations remain private,"
Google+ Product Manager Michael Cai said in a blog post.
Whether
it's designs for a product in beta testing, or notes from an off-site
meeting, "anything you post will remain restricted to the organization,"
Cai said.
Administrators will be able to make restricted
communities the default for their organization, Google said. After
creating the restricted community, users can share files from Google's
Drive file storage service as well as videos, events and photos.
Administrators can later invite other team members to join the
conversation, Google said.
Users can also create communities open
to others outside the company, so clients, agencies and other business
partners can join in, Google said.
Other social networking applications for business users include Yammer, Socialtext and Salesforce.com's Chatter service.
Via : Computerworld
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