In late 2006, rumors swirled that Google was thinking about purchasing Facebook for a cool $2.6 bil (or maybe less, depending on how willing you were to believe the hype). In the end, Facebook decided to remain independent (a move that seems to have worked to their advantage so far) leaving Google social network-less. Of course, Google is never, ever willing to be outdone, so a few weeks ago the search giant rolled out its very own social network—Buzz.

Buzz is part of Gmail, which Google (rightly) claims has always been a social network waiting to happen. Buzz allows users to create profiles and update their statuses just like its social network competitors, but it’s also sort of like an RSS feed on crack: Users can link any number of social media accounts that they already have (including Flickr, Blogger, Twitter, Google Reader, and YouTube accounts) to their Buzz account so that when they update these networks, the updates automatically appear to their friends on Buzz as well.

Google believes that by promoting Buzz on the Gmail platform, they are giving it distinct advantages over social network numero uno, Facebook. For one thing, users don’t have to search for new friends—Buzz recognizes who's friends with whom via users' Gmail contacts and connects them automatically. Google also boasts that by integrating Buzz into Gmail, users will be able to track Buzz alerts and respond to them without having to follow links and log in to an outside site.
 
Still, with 400 million users, Facebook is without a doubt the top social media dog, and it doesn't seem poised to budge. But social network and media sites are certainly not immortal—before Facebook came along, MySpace was king, and now it’s virtually dead (well, at least as far as people over the age of 16 are concerned). The trouble with MySpace was that it felt incredibly juvenile—users decorated their profiles with sporty and sparkly princess themes, added music that assaulted profile visitors, and “totally wunted u 2 luk @ there pics from SpRiNg BrEaK”! Facebook toppled MySpace because it was cleaner, offered only a single, standardized layout, and promised users increased privacy (it was open only to college students once upon a time, you know).

For all the bells and whistles and apps and Pages that it has added since its inception, Facebook continues to feel like a social network that’s adult and “with it.”  And Facebook users, in spite of their moaning about the endless (and senseless) redesigns, constantly changing privacy settings, and annoying calls to “Join my mafia!” and “Help me raise my barn!” are largely pretty content with Facebook—their friends, their pictures, their videos, and their wall posts are all there, after all. Buzz might catch on among a few Gmail users (in an “I’m here so I’ll give it a try” sort of way) but unless Buzz offers a feature that Facebook absolutely cannot duplicate (and we know from the Twitter-like “live feed” that Facebook will try) it’s hard to believe that the Facebook Empire would actually lose a significant number of its users to the new kid in the Google-verse.