The latest beleaguered Google product to get a death date is Google+. Google's controversial Facebook clone is shutting down on April 2. Google has been backing away from the service for years, but it gave the site a death sentence in October, after revelations of a data leak were made public. Now we have a concrete shutdown date for the service.

Google's support page details exactly how the G+ shutdown will go down, and it's not just freezing posts on the site. The whole site will be taken down, and everything will be deleted. "On April 2nd, your Google+ account and any Google+ pages you created will be shut down and we will begin deleting content from consumer Google+ accounts," the page reads.

The whole deletion process sounds brutal. It won't just be the entire Google+ site that will be scrubbed from the Internet—Google+-powered comments on Blogger and other third-party sites will all be deleted, too. Users of Google+ have until April to download and save everything themselves, which they can do via this page.

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Google is killing Google Cloud Print View more stories Google+ was Google's panicked reaction to the rise of Facebook and other social networks. Back in 2011 Google saw Facebook as an existential threat. What if people stopped searching and just asked their friends for good websites and product recommendations? It sounds ridiculous today, but back then Google thought social was the future, and Google's then-CEO Larry Page tied all employee bonuses to the success of Google+. As a result, Googlers forced Google+ into every other Google product, whether it made sense or not. At one point the service was described as "kind of like the next version of Google" by a Google executive. Now Google has to remove Google+'s tentacles from all of its products.

With all the integrations into other products, Google warns that shutting down Google+ won't be a quick process: "The process of deleting content from consumer Google+ accounts, Google+ Pages, and Album Archive will take a few months, and content may remain through this time." The Google support page reads: "For example, users may still see parts of their Google+ account via activity log and some consumer Google+ content may remain visible to G Suite users until consumer Google+ is deleted."

While April 2 is the drop-dead date for profiles, the wind-down of Google+ will start pretty soon. As of February 4 you won't be able to make new Google+ profiles or communities. Google says that third-party sites and apps that use the Google+ login button will stop working "in the coming weeks" and that third parties should switch to the non-Google+ version of Google's sign-in button. Google+-powered comments will be stripped from Blogger on February 4 and from third-party sites on March 7.

Google has been backing away from Google+ for some time, and today the service is not as fully Google-integrated as it has been in the past. Google Photos and Google Hangouts were once parts of Google+, and now they are standalone services. At one point Google+ was mandatory for YouTube comments, and now it isn't. The service was similarly de-integrated from the Google Play Store, Gmail, and Google Search.

Google+ is yet another product in a list of services Google is planning to shut down soon. Before Google+ is shuttered, Google Inbox will die in March. Google Hangouts will start to wind down in October for G Suite users, with a consumer shutdown expected sometime in 2020. In the future I suspect we'll be talking about the death of Google Play Music, which is expected to merge with YouTube Music at some point. It's going to be a tough year to be a Google user.

Update: It's important to note that this shutdown is just for consumer Google+ information. For paying G Suite customers, Google+ will remain active. Google's page says "If you’re a G Suite customer, Google+ for your G Suite account should remain active." The company even promises "a new look and new features soon" on the G Suite side of things.