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Previously on "Peeple App lifespan: Do bookies take bets on this kind of thing?"

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  • NickFitz
    replied
    To add to the fun, Snopes suggests that the whole thing may just be some kind of bizarre scheme for promoting the existing business of the two women in question, who are… recruitment consultants!

    Peeple Bleater : snopes.com

    Leave a comment:


  • TykeMerc
    replied
    Originally posted by Chuck View Post
    Brilliant. I'm going to sign up some mates.
    There's a few Agents who could be signed up too, it would help them immensely with their 2 References type behaviour

    Leave a comment:


  • Chuck
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    Anybody who has your mobile number can sign you up, and post a comment about you.
    Brilliant. I'm going to sign up some mates.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Originally posted by oracleslave View Post
    Reads like the "roast me" craze whereby instead of holding up a paper sign - you register your desire to garner abuse by signing up to an app.
    The real delight of this is that you don't have to sign up to the app. Anybody who has your mobile number can sign you up, and post a comment about you. Once you have been signed up you are not allowed to leave.

    They argue that if the comment you are signed up with is abusive, they won't make it public immediately - though they will after 48 hours, on the assumption you can "talk it through" with the person making the comment and they will change it in that time, because everybody is nice.

    But they are the ones who get to decide what is abusive. So if, for example, somebody posts a message that seems to be effusive praise but is actually major trolling (e.g. posting a message about how strong X has been as they begin their transition to womanhood, to the account of somebody who happens to work for a fundamentalist Christian) these idiots would happily approve it straight away because it "says something nice about you".

    As you can see, they've really thought this through, and covered all the angles
    Last edited by NickFitz; 2 October 2015, 11:16.

    Leave a comment:


  • MaryPoppins
    replied
    Is this like the old 'hot or not' site?

    Leave a comment:


  • TykeMerc
    replied
    Indeed it is utterly appropriate

    Leave a comment:


  • oracleslave
    replied
    Reads like the "roast me" craze whereby instead of holding up a paper sign - you register your desire to garner abuse by signing up to an app.

    Leave a comment:


  • meridian
    replied
    I almost spat my coffee out at this comment:

    i do hope all the exploitative, money grubbing, race to the bottom, scum sucking, tulip for brains, twats who thought creating and funding this invitation to abuse was a good idea, lose every penny
    then i'd like them to slip in the street and land in a large steaming turd, not be injured, but as they lay reeking, get pissed on by people passing by who mistake the steam for smoke and are therefore being positive in their output

    Leave a comment:


  • BrilloPad
    replied
    Complete arseholes excited by prospect of ‘Yelp for people’

    What sort of world would it be if we were all honest? Like CUK general?

    Where can we rate the people who came up with this app?

    Where can we rate the CUK moderators?

    Leave a comment:


  • darmstadt
    replied
    Irony: Woman makes app that lets people rate and review you, Yelp-style. Now SHE'S upset people are 'reviewing' her

    Leave a comment:


  • cojak
    replied
    Hence 9 months.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    From the "Not Doing Themselves Any Favours" department:
    "There's a lot of misunderstandings of the way the app actually works," Cordray says. "We have more integrity features and more accountability features built in than most online ratings systems today. I can appreciate, when people found out the world was actually round and not flat, and that we revolved around the sun instead of the sun revolving around us, there was tons of fear and uproar. We need to keep in mind that with any new concept and any new idea, there's always going to be some fear and some concern."

    I say again:

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    It's not just RTBF that'll screw it, at least in the UK. Our libel laws, though no longer offering the jackpot payouts of a couple of decades ago, are much tougher and easier to build a case on than those in the USA. The Register thus wasn't quite right in calling it "Slander As A Service", but I think they deserve some slack on the grounds of alliteration

    There's also the Data Protection Act. Basically, that would shut them down before they've even started, as by definition their process allows - nay, requires - people to enter personally identifying information about others, without their consent, and make it public. That will never fly, not just in the UK but throughout the EU, as far as I know.

    And there's the appalling PR from the utter pasting they've been receiving on social media all day.

    I give it Monday at the latest before they announce a major rethink, probably trying to make out it's everybody else's fault at the same time.

    One final point:

    Leave a comment:


  • cojak
    replied
    November apparently.

    I was going to say 3 months, but allowing for the blithe idiotic optimism of the owners and the time it will take to get a few bullied people together for some lawyer-loving class-action type thing, I make it 9 months.

    But you're right TM, the 'Right to Be Forgotten' might kick it into touch immediately.

    Leave a comment:


  • TykeMerc
    replied
    What a ludicrous concept, as mentioned in the article it's just a licence to troll.

    However, users will not be able to delete comments made about them. Nor will they be able to remove themselves from the site once on it.
    Won't the EU ruling on the Right to be Forgotten scupper this element completely?

    It's not planned for a 1st of April release or anything is it?

    Leave a comment:

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