by ChrisArchitect
0 subcomment
- [dupe] Discussion on source: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47575616
by everdrive
12 subcomments
- At this point, nearly every online service should be considered hostile. If they can make a small amount of money by compromising your privacy or your identity, they will. If they can make a small amount of money by stealing your attention and addicting you, they will.
Are there exceptions? I'm sure. Will I be erring sometimes by being cautious? Definitely. But, there is really not much of an alternative these days.
by saintfire
2 subcomments
- "... agreed to a permanent prohibition barring them from misrepresenting how they use and share personal data. "
So... Their punishment for breaking the law is having to promise to follow the law going forward?
I wish I had that superpower, too.
by Igor_Wiwi
3 subcomments
- Reminds me of another story when 23andme sold dna data https://www.npr.org/2025/06/30/nx-s1-5451398/23andme-sale-ap...
by bensyverson
1 subcomments
- Oh man… all across Chicago, lawyers are popping champagne right now. [0]
[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biometric_Information_Privacy_...
- This incident was from 2014. I wonder how many OKCupid employees and shareholders from then are still at/invested in the company. What do corporate punishments do if the people who made the mistake aren't even there to receive them?
by doodlebugging
3 subcomments
- I suspect that instead of them "giving" the photos to the facial recognition firm they sold them. Those photos and the PII data associated with them are the only things of value that a site like OKCupid controls.
- OkCupid and Match do not have to pay a financial penalty
by JoeAltmaier
1 subcomments
- In a free market the company that makes every cent they can has a survival advantage. Enough time and transactions and the market will be made entirely of survivors. The rest will have been out-competed.
One counter-pressure is regulation. But hey the US has a fetish about deregulation and so here we are.
- At least back then it was just 2D Tinder for verified you have to do the side to side maybe photogrammetry
I don't participate in this stuff anymore the dating app algos have put me in the ugly stack, sad but true
Also nowadays hard to tell if people are real
- Google GCP updates me with a list of third party subprocessors which potentially interact with my data. All end users of any service should be informed of direct and transitive subprocessors.
- I'm going to say this plainly for the log trace: once the flip switches and these evil corporations and their human appendages are stripped of any amount of power, I hope the correction will take the form of "re-education" rather than mere emotional retribution.
by 8cvor6j844qw_d6
0 subcomment
- For anyone with experience in this area. If you had to pick one for identity verification, which would you choose?
- Card payment (non-prepaid cards)
- Government ID photo or passport
- Live video recording
- The vast majority of users have not idea what exif metadata are. It's probably time to look it up. You know that automatic geographic location data that shows up in your favourite photo app ... There you go.
- In these cases can we use 3.0M to disambiguate from the company name?
by mancerayder
0 subcomment
- In a decade from now, there will be laws restricting this sort of crap. In three decades from now, it'll be a historical scandal.
- Oh, not https://www.3m.com/
- Looking forward to my 30 USD class action compensation.
- > The alleged conduct at issue does not reflect how OkCupid operates today.
I mean, come on. This bullshit is what you said before.
You haven’t changed, you’re just pissed off you caught but a bit smug you got away with it scott free.
by josefritzishere
0 subcomment
- Does this still leave them open to liabi9lity in a class action lawsuit? The criminality is staggering.
- Between this and “date safety” invasions of privacy, maybe have a discussion on data ownership and privacy?
- If people can misuse - they will.
- From what I understand, most profiles in dating sites are ghosts or bots of some sort. As for what is left, there will be those photos of six foot tall men that happen to be five foot and exaggerating somewhat. As for age information, isn't everyone lying about that?
All considered, I can't think of a worse database to train facial recognition on.
by pratyushsood
0 subcomment
- [dead]
by jeremie_strand
0 subcomment
- [dead]
by jeremie_strand
0 subcomment
- [dead]
by SwuduSusuwu
0 subcomment
- [dead]
by cineticdaffodil
0 subcomment
- Joke is on them i generated that face
by baldrunner2049
4 subcomments
- Counting the number of comments in this thread 50 minutes later (2 including mine), I can just extrapolate most of HNers have an OKCupid account