answer:I know bunches of people who migrated there and very few are still active. I always said it would never catch on, because everyone and their grandmother is already on FB, and those aren’t the tech-savvy or quick learners, so they weren’t about to move. Those who seemed to like G+ best were the ones who really wanted the networking expansion capabilities of Twitter for their profession and hobbies, with a more conversational format; and privacy options when wanting to share more personal content. The masses are happy just using FB to stay in touch with those they already know. I hated that G+ allowed anybody to find you and add you to their circles, and it became inundated with spammers. Of course I didn’t add them back, but I didn’t like that I couldn’t remove myself (other than by blocking completely), so those people could then over-inflate their number of people in their circles to imagine the they were relevant.