7/4/11

Chrome Extension Imports Facebook Friends to Google+

Facebook Friend Exporter is the work of developer Mohamed Mansour, a software engineer who works at Blackberry maker Research in Motion, according to his online resume ( and his Google+ page), and develops open-source tools in his spare time. The extension wasn't designed with Google+ in mind; in fact, version 1 was released last November, but it has exploded in the past week as the limited number of Google+ beta users have gone searching for ways to port over their entire Facebook world to Google.


The extension essentially extracts the data for each one of your Facebook friends and then converts it to one huge data file or ports it into Google contacts. The process of extracting all of your friends' data can be rather time-consFacebook Friend Exporter retrieves your Facebook data. (click to enlarge)uming, depending on your broadband speed and how many friends you have. After about half an hour, only 150 of my friends had been processed.

Facebook Friend Exporter (click to enlarge)The app doesn't instantly stuff all your Facebook friends right into Google+, either. It just makes them available in your Google contacts, so you can then move them into Circles on Google+. All in all, the multiple step process can take quite a while, and many users have reported problems ranging from getting "stuck" during the import process to crashed browsers.

On its face, the app seems to violate Facebook's Terms of Service, but it's been around for many months now with over 17,000 downloads. And Mansour is very upfront about his feelings on the matter, as he writes in the app's description:

"Get *your* data contact out of Facebook, whether they want you to or not. You gave them your friends and allowed them to store that data, and you have right to take it back out! Facebook doesn't own my friends."

Of course, Facebook does allow you to download all your information, including wall posts, photos, and friend data, all in one big chunk, but it's not exactly a user-friendly chunk. Mansour's Chrome extension isn't a perfect solution to the problem of Facebook-to-Google+ migration either, but it's a start. I have to wonder how long it will last now that it -- and Google -- certainly have the more full attention of Facebook.

Click here for the original article at pcworld.com

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