
Today Facebook begins rolling out a new opt-in feature
called Nearby Friends. It lets friends see approximately how far
away you are from them, and you can share your exact, on-going location with
them for a limited time. While it’s sure to stir privacy concerns, Nearby
Friends could get people spending more time with friends in the real-world
instead of online as it hits iOS and Android in the US in the coming weeks.
![nearby_friends[1]](http://tctechcrunch2011.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/nearby_friends1.png?w=680&h=382)
Below is a deep analysis of how Nearby Friends works, how it
was built, its privacy implications, how it impacts the competitive landscape,
and its long-term opportunities for Facebook. But here’s the tl;dr version:
Nearby Friends was built by the Glancee
location sharing app team led by Andrea Vaccari that Facebook acquired in 2012.
It adds a list of nearby friends to Facebook’s iOS and Android apps. It will
also send notifications if you come within a short distance of a friend, and if
someone shares their precise location with you you’ll see it on a map.
Vaccari tells me “the idea is to make it really easy to
discover when someone is around you, and meet up and spend time together.” It
wants to facilitate those serendipitous meetups where you run into a
friend and end up having a meal or hanging out together. It’s a meatspace
manifestation of Facebook’s mission to connect people, and a rebuttal to
criticism that Facebook isolates us.
The feature could spell trouble for other location sharing
apps like Foursquare and Google Latitude that haven’t reached ubiquity, as
Facebook has built it into its core iOS and Android apps that have enormous
userbases. It could also challenge the friend-gathering features of Highlight,
Banjo, Sonar, Connect, and more startups. [Disclosure: I advise an unlaunched
location sharing startup] Leaving Nearby Friends on will cause some battery
drain, but not as bad as some other location apps, according to Facebook.
As for privacy, Nearby Friends is opt-in so you can ignore
it and never have to use it if you don’t want to. It’s only available to people
over 18. It uses a reciprocal privacy model so you can only see your proximity
to friends if you both have it turned on, and you can only see someone’s exact
location if they purposefully share it with you. While you can select the
specific list or group of friends you want to share your proximity with, many
people may simply keep this visible to all their friends — a very wide net.
This and how easy it is to forget to turn off Nearby Friends could lead to
inadvertent “oversharing”. [Update: And Facebook confirms it will use
your Nearby Friends Location History to target you with ads.]
If people manage their privacy with the provided
tools, Nearby Friends could help them gather with more friends for Tuesday
dinners, Friday night parties, or Saturdays in the park.
How Nearby Friends Works
Once you get the rollout of Nearby Friends, you’ll see it in
their app list in the Facebook navigation menu under “More” on iOS or Android.
From there you can opt in to turning Nearby Friends on, and select if you want
to share your proximity with all your friends, or a specific friend list or
group.
You’ll then be able to see a Nearby Friends list that shows
the distance away in increments of a mile (<0.5 miles, 0.7 miles, 1.8 miles)
from anyone you’re sharing your proximity with who has also opted in and turned
on Nearby Friends. The list also shows timestamps of when someone’s location
was last queried,and if you’re in a big city it will also show their
neighborhood.
Next to these friends’ names is a location icon you can tap
to send that person your real-time location. You’ll get a chance to choose how
long to share your location (an hour, a few hours, until tomorrow, until I
manually stop) and include a 40-character message about what you’re doing or
want to do, and perhaps a request that they send you their exact location.
Otherwise you could send someone a Facebook message asking for them to send you
their location. Anyone who shares their exact coordinates with you will show up
on a map view.
What makes Facebook Nearby Friends different than
competitors and could give it an advantage is that it’s centered around
broadcasting proximity, not location. We’re much more willing to share how
close to someone we are than where we are on a map, and it’s basically just as
functional. If someone’s close, you’ll know, and can ping them about their
precise location and meeting up. Broadcasting location is creepy so we’re less
likely to share it, and can cause awkward drop-ins where someone tries to come
see you when you didn’t want them to. The product only works if lots of people
are using it, and the focus on proximity makes it private enough that they
might.
Here’s a short video from Facebook showing how Nearby
Friends works:

To get your location, Facebook will frequently pull your GPS
coordinates. To minimize battery drain, it will read your accelerometer and not
pull location as often if you’re staying still. Facebook’s testing says Nearby
Friends 0.3% to 0.4% per hour. This is less than the 0.7% per hour Foursquare
previously said it drains, and Facebook think it’s more efficient than Google
Latitude, though the big G hasn’t released any specific battery stats. Vaccari
tells me “Battery saving was one of the core principles as we were developing
the product.”
If you don’t have Nearby Friends turned on, Facebook may try
to coax you into opting in by showing teaser News Feed stories that read
something like “3 of your friends are nearby right now, turn on Nearby Friends
to see who and how close they are”. If you do have it turned on, you’ll see
Feed stories that are basically excerpts of your Nearby Friends list.
If you have Nearby Friends turned on, Facebook will also
occasionally send you notifications that a friend who has opted in is close. It
intelligently looks at where that person goes frequently so as not to ping you
everytime they get to work if you live a block away, and it reads their
location and accelerometer to make sure they are just driving by but are
actually stopped and potentially available to hang out.
Some frequent use cases for Nearby Friends include: “Which
friends are in the park too?” “Is anyone else at this concert?” “Who’s nearby I
could get coffee with?” “I’m in a new city, which of my friends are in this
neighborhood?” But there’s also more niche possibilities. You could turn on
persistent exact location sharing with your family for security when you
travel. When you fly into an airport, you could see if friends are there too
that you could split a ride with.
Facebook has recently been highlighting its new focus on
standalone apps with its newCreative Labs
initiative and the launch of Paper. But Nearby Friends is built into
Facebook’s core apps because Vaccari says it only works “if you have a lot of
people in the system. A standalone app would have given us the opportunity
to make bigger decisions…but doing it in the main app, we guarantee you find
most of your friends there.” However, Vaccari said it still could become its
own app in the future. For now, Nearby Friends’ success may depend on just how
much Facebook is willing to promote the product in the feed. It’s currently
buried in the navigation menu next to Nearby Places, the
Yelp-competitor Facebook launched last year that everyone forgot about.
Vacarri admitted he was a bit nervous in our interview as
he’d been working on Nearby Friends for two years. Glancee had tried to make a
social discovery app for making new friends, but realized “before meeting new
people it was important to connect with people you already know, including
people who aren’t your closest friends.” When Facebook came knocking, he
saw the opportunity to use the existing social graph to build a product that
let people actually connect in person. He hopes people will use Nearby Friends
to spend time with their best buddies, but also people they like but aren’t
close enough to text message.
Business Potential?
Facebook says that right now, Nearby Friends won’t be used
for ad targeting. But there’s no denying how valuable location data could be to
the social network. Imagine if the ads you saw in your News Feed were for
restaurants or shops a block away. Those would surely be more relevant to users
and more effective for businesses.
[Update: Facebook tells me “at this time it’s not being
used for advertising or marketing, but in the future it will be.” Here's
our follow-up on how Facebook will make money from your location data.]
Is It Privacy Safe?
For being a feature that constantly shares your proximity to
friends or your exact location, Facebook tried to make it respect our privacy.
It’s opt-in, so no one will find it themselves sharing their coordinates
without purposefully turning it on. You can turn it off any time with a few
taps. You can set who sees your proximity, they have to be sharing their
proximity with you to see yours, you have to explicitly share exact location,
and unless you set it to share indefinitely, your exact location will disappear
within a day.
When I asked Vaccari bluntly if the feature has strong enough
privacy, he said “Yes, we think so. The way the product is built is safe by
default. Location is not precise by default. We want you you to know there’s an
opportunity to meet, not where [your friends] are.”
But just because Facebook built it with safety options
doesn’t mean people will use them.
People should create a list of their close friends they’re
comfortable sharing their proximity with and select that as the privacy
setting. Most people won’t, though, and will just share with all their friends.
That will includes bosses, co-workers, family memebers, and random people they
met once but accepted a friend request from.
People will forget to turn it off. They’ll share their exact
location indefinitely with plans to turn it off after a vacation together, but
won’t remember to.
Luckily, since the app is based around proximity, the worst
case scenario might be that your boss sees you’re somewhere close to a bar
district at 2am or not near your apartment. Or a spouse sees you’re not getting
closer to home after work — maybe because you’re getting a beer with buddies,
but maybe because you’re…Which brings up the issue of partners essentially
stalking each other by forcing one anothe to constantly share their exact
location. Vaccari says there are plenty of niche apps that can do this. But
it’s certainly a lot easier when someone already has Facebook installed.
Nearby Friends will be a test of our own ability to protect
ourselves. Facebook has equipped us with all the necessary privacy options and
set respectful defaults. Wielded skillfully, Nearby Friends could unlock
real-world interactions in the way Foursquare and all the other check-in
products were supposed to. More than money, power, or success, I truly believe
spending time with people you love is the best route to happiness. We have
plenty of tools for sharing and consuming memories. Finally Facebook has built
a feature that will help us create them.

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