We seen this before with Twitter. Suggestions of who to follow on the side of your screen. It was waste to me, they would always put very uninteresting celebrities over there. Well as Google + is trying to build some ground in the social networking game they are taking a play from Twitter’s playbook. Click here for a full tutorial on Google + and check the rest of this story after the jump.

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Google+ has started offering suggested user lists, and already the complaints are rolling in after the model rankled users on Twitter two years ago.

Cribbing notes from Twitter’s playbook, Google+ has begun offering a suggested user list and it’s already causing quite a stir in social media circles.

Bradley Horowitz, vice president of product management for Google+, tipped his hand to the effort in a tweet on Twitter Sept. 2, noting: “We’re about to pilot a ‘suggested user’-like mechanism on Google+. If you’ve got more than 100k followers on Twitter, DM me – let’s talk!”

And here is the link to get started cherry-picking from the list:

Huffington Post Senior Editor Craig Kanalley found this list of famous folks. It includes Dallas Mavericks owner and Web pundit Mark Cuban, actor/businessman Ashton Kutcher, singer Britney Spears and the indomitable actor/pitchman William Shatner.

When Twitter launched its list two years ago, it made life easier for users who wanted new people to follow but didn’t know how to find them. It also jacked up follower rates for popular people such as the celebrities listed above.

The result was that it made Twitter noisier, and left others wanting more followers at a disadvantage. Suggested user lists, after all, don’t contribute to a level playing field.

Already the skepticism is rolling in on Google+. Kanalley noted:

“I don’t think this is a good idea. It’s going to alienate people and lead to an inevitable followers war that can hurt the health of the social network and inflate people’s egos. As the famous get more followers, the non-featured fall farther behind, and a giant gap is created between the two. This is what happened on Twitter.”

The Blog Report Executive Producer Zennie 62, who is black, complained the list is “overwhelmingly white.”:

“The Google Suggested User List reads like the typical San Francisco Bay Area tech firm’s view of the World: most of the “interesting and famous people” are white, and if they’re black, they’re male rappers or athletes. Hello, Snoop Dog, Chamillionaire, 50 Cent, Dwight Howard, and Floyd Mayweather!”

Zennir 62 further wondered whether Google didn’t believe black women were noteworthy enough to put on its suggested user list.

Horowitz posted this list of suggestions for leveraging the suggested user list on Google+, noting that users need to be interesting if they want to get followed.

He didn’t address Zennie 62’s complaints of racist actions by Google, but did addressed Kanalley’s concern of favoritism, which is shared by many in the social media sector:

“Today’s list isn’t yet personalized. At first personalization will be “lite” – users in different regions and languages will get different recommendations. But per above, we intend to allow people to deeply personalize and connect with like-minded people that create great content around almost any topic they care about.

He added that popular people must retain their position on the list by creating compelling content.

The bigger story is how Google+ is becoming more official leaning. In addition to suggested user list, there are verified accounts and serious consequences for users who don’t use their real names on the social network.

EW