Online Dating The Internet seems to be a completely independent world, and it is entirely different from reality. There seems to be so many possibilities. One is a new online dating boom, and draws my attention many times. On a rainy afternoon, I stooped down with a computer chair blanket. I understand that many baby-boomer generations are widows or divorced, so many partners are looking for partners, and many partners are looking for partners.
Online dating is a fictitious world. When creating a setting file, some kind of image is projected. People are attracted to this image and they create their own fantasy. Online dating sites are really only layers of self and anxiety. Basically, nothing is real. Well, she is famous on the one hand and is dead on the other hand. Maybe that's it. Especially if a woman's head is full of neurological disorder, men tend to be absorbed in famous dead women. Marilyn Monroe, Francesca Woodman, Silvia Plus. If most of today's people meet these ladies in real life, they will call them crazy, but for some reason they become worthy of the safety of death. Perhaps this is not your normal OkCupid prediction for ordinary women. Perhaps this is the illusion of going beyond this step: Fantasy is a fun, talented, dead woman who likes to get sick. "Amherst's Beauty" suddenly became "girl of depressed dream" for online dating.
Digital Strategist Amy Webb shared her online dating experience with TED's lecture "How to Break Online Dating". As super intelligent left brain data, Amy a) struggling to find the right spouse when using online dating service, and b) feel the need to reverse engineer the algorithm so that she can understand it A person with an ideal profile that is. So she did what the self-respected growth hacker did. She made a competitive intelligence, made an A / B test with her profile, and built a system to evaluate potential matches based on the potential prerequisites of her spouse. After posting her latest optimized profile Amy received a number of responses and finally met the man she later married. This is what she said:
Is this profile important for online dating success? Yes. But is personal information safe? No We found that some of the online dating users they are concerned about put confidential information about themselves in the public domain from their profile. Many people share pictures of themselves and their loved ones in this way. 15% of people using online dating will display their family's public photos on their profile and 17% will share their friends' pictures. More worried is that one in ten people (9%) publishes and shares their private photos on their profile, so there is a risk that valuable images and confidential images will be abused by strangers It is that.