[caption id="attachment_11596" align="alignright" width="580"]Image:TechHive[/caption]Google+ wants to use your real name and your photo in ads. If you don't like the sound of that, you can opt out. Change your Shared Endorsement settings to tell them "no".
[caption id="attachment_11596" align="alignright" width="580"]Image:TechHive[/caption]Google+ wants to use your real name and your photo in ads. If you don't like the sound of that, you can opt out. Change your Shared Endorsement settings to tell them "no".
Brad Chacos, senior writer at PC World, tells exactly how to keep Google from using your real name and face in their ads.
The journey was long and full of baby steps, but we’ve finally reached the destination: Google updated its terms of service on Friday to allow the company to slap your real name and face alongside ads, under an expansion of its “shared endorsements” program.
Getting here took a while, and it took a slow expansion of the Google+ social service.
First, Google+ users had to sign up for the service with their real names, rather than pseudonyms. Next, all new Google Accounts—even if you only wanted Gmail—required you to sign up for Google+. Then, back in May, Google began coaxing veteran YouTubers into adopting Google+ accounts, and a few weeks ago, the company announced that all YouTube comments will be powered exclusively by Google+.
Google+ integration throughout Google’s services seemed pretty handy at first. When searching the Play Store, the power of “shared endorsements” showed you when your friends like a given app (not unlike what iOS and OS X users see when looking for game recommendations in Apple’s Game Center app). When searching the web, Google+ identified when your buddies +1’d a given site. Now, Google’s bringing your real name, face, reviews, and comments to Search ads across the web.
Read the entire article How to Keep Your Real Name and Face Out of Google's Ads, at TechHive.