Skip to main content

tv   Shift  Deutsche Welle  April 11, 2020 11:15pm-11:31pm CEST

11:15 pm
drummers that bumped out a beat at the china trust brothers stadium while cardboard cutouts of fans replace the real thing as a club tried to give the players at least a small flavor of the match day experience. that's the latest from g.w. news i'm kyra should send more news at the top of the hour for now thanks for watching. give us a little self it's not easy to go to another country you know nothing about why i don't do this because we can't stay in venezuela. that. closely global news that matters d.w. made for mines.
11:16 pm
online dating is huge these days worldwide some 220000000 people use absa websites to find love facebook wants a piece of the pie to our topic today on shipped. so far facebook users can access the new platform in 20 countries including the u.s. and china chile mexico peru and across asia but soon facebook wants to expand.
11:17 pm
fading freezer to europe africa and india as well analysts expect online dating platforms to turn over 11000000000 euros in 2020 so far match group the internet company behind tinder is the biggest market player. might not be safe from hackers listening in on our intimate conversations it's much less riddled with scandals than facebook after all that's happened really willing to trust a book with private details about all of life. some 200000000 facebook users say their single. mark zuckerberg is now targeting this vast online market with facebook's newest feature facebook dating we want facebook to be somewhere where you can start meaningful relationships. currently facebook posts 2 and a half 1000000000 active users worldwide so the odds of finding a match are reasonably high. but jason kelly a privacy expert with the electronic frontier foundation warns us not to trust that
11:18 pm
facebook will keep our intimate chats and sensitive data safe. facebook dating raises a lot of red flags because it's because a history of misusing user data and there's no evidence that anything has changed in particular other than facebook's messaging. facebook dating is no standalone app but a feature integrated into the existing facebook infrastructure which has already been hacked several times. so it's no wonder that data security experts fear our romantic preferences will soon end up exposed for the world to see. it's also unclear how exactly facebook plans to use this data. after all the platform makes money by selling ads. in the u.s. and canada online magazine slate found that facebook earns around $120.00 euros per year per user. can we trust the fact that mark zuckerberg says they're not going to use the. data for advertising purposes i think the answer is no facebook's dating
11:19 pm
app very likely is collecting information or will be one day that they might sell because that's their business model. in the u.s. some believe that mark zuckerberg is out to revolutionize the dating market. and some even speculate he's planning to weaken the current market leader match dot com so he can buy it up. you know. facebook users must know there are revealing lots of their personal information for the company's financial game the same surely goes for online dating but aside from that can facebook dating rival leading apps like in the online dating consultant amy letting him tried it out for us. users can only access facebook dating through the most vile app it's not available in the desktop version but the feature is simple enough to use and it's free there's no premium account option yet in the
11:20 pm
countries where it is available the dating service is already integrated into the facebook app but before she can get started amy letting hand still needs to opt in and put together her dating profile. option to choose whether man and woman are let me be more specific which is really cool. it feels really fast the set up it doesn't feel like you're doing a lot of work. and some of the questions that they ask kind of take out the ease of what do i say about myself or talk about myself i think that's the hardest part i really really like this question something i'm embarrassed to admit that i love is you know vulnerability is a great way to connect with other singles so that question sparks invulnerability. then suggests my for potential dates from a pool of 2 plundered 1000000 self declared facebook singles friends are off limits
11:21 pm
unless both previously deem each other their secret crush. so far though facebook hasn't revealed any other official stats on who really uses the feature. i'm not totally in love with that i think there are still a lot of people that need to know about it i do like match dot com the reason why is because it really puts the user in control they have a keyword search option and you can type in specific words in the keyword search that allows you to find common interests here. we're relying on facebook to make sure that they match us based on their algorithm facebook's matchmaking algorithm draws upon the information uses provide in their accounts including the events in groups they join there's a hard icon for when you like someone and in extreme when you don't sound like tinder functionality is very similar this book has that safety feature where you can tell your friends your location of what where you're going as
11:22 pm
a woman with online dating it can be really feel very vulnerable and scary and i feel that the facebook having that security feature come when that part by again because there's more subscribers on twitter it is the powerhouse of like subscribers you're going to have more options on tender than you do on facebook. could facebook overtake tinder as the biggest dating past form if only 3 percent of facebook's active users sign up for the dating service then yes but is it really just about numbers online the pool of potential matches is vast but does the sheer number of singles available really increase the odds of finding my soulmate and how exactly do dating apps find potential matches some providers say they apply a scientific method some even use genetic compatibility tests but is that how you will guarantee the perfect chemistry. online dating services turn over
11:23 pm
a tidy profit with people's yearning for love. some make sweeping promises claiming to apply mathematical formulas to crack the code of love and help users find the one. in reality however most apps are pretty straightforward they either tap into users' social media profiles or compare music tastes some also use users location or g.p.s. data all this combined with the supplemental data users disclose on age sex and personal preferences is then fed into an algorithm. just how providers way each individual snippet of information they can gather to match profiles remains a well kept secret but one thing's for sure. just because someone listens to the same music as i do that doesn't mean we're
11:24 pm
a good fit in all areas let alone a perfect match. i think that's why we always allow for a certain element of surprise and it feels this is. wait so finding someone you really click with is just. disappointing just to be sure you met psychologist. one of the oldest online dating platforms around. yet developed the platforms questionnaire which draws on psychological psychoanalytical and sociological insights. to create the perfect match par ship one of the world's oldest online dating platforms some chance and more on algorithms currently about 11000000 singles are registered on their site commers 1st need to fill out a detailed questionnaire as psychologist impartial co-founder explains the algorithm uses the answers provided to determine 32 different personality traits
11:25 pm
that are supposedly decisive for lasting relationships. and since users are often reluctant to show off anything but their best side the questions take an indirect approach. how would you react if your partner or someone else started taking your phone. will they respond with i don't mind or i'd leave switch partners . we're asking about the phone but what we really want to know is how forgiving or strict someone is in the expectations they set or how flexible they are towards others. find out what makes. it really. that for sure today there aren't any studies on the quality of on line dating platforms like facebook dating. in short it's hard to predict.
11:26 pm
we can't feed emotions into algorithms. algorithms can do is inform our strategy for finding a potential mate then develop feelings for if. we don't deliver the emotions but we do increase the odds of 2 people developing a bond they would both call a good relationship. so if you know what you're looking for then you have a decent chance of finding a partner online but from my personal experience a good profile picture usually makes the biggest difference more than shared interests or self disclosed personality traits and i'm not the only one who thinks that. of course i only upload pictures i like that i think capture me well i see no point in only uploading my prettiest holiday pictures where i look is fabulous to say angelina jolie it's more important to make sure the picture really shows who i am. i had what they call a selfie session with my camera set on self timer. i posed in
11:27 pm
a posed for ages it was sort of awkward. so i mean that's a profile pictures of people showing off or wearing next to nothing those are the worst. humans are visual creatures that's why in the world of online dating the 1st impression really counts. whether we like a person's face for not is crucial. but surprisingly our other senses play a key role too. even if we're only looking at a picture not actually standing face to face. our mind imagines what that person might smell like then when we meet in person our mind checks up our assumption was right if not we can get pretty disappointed. in the end disappointment is just as much part of the process in online dating as it is offline the selection of potential partners is huge nearly every other internet user is single with roughly 20 percent of them willing to give online dating
11:28 pm
a shot that's 300000000 people worldwide and as facebook keeps expanding its dating platform more and more might be able to finally meet their better half. but let's not forget that by using dating platforms we are also sharing very private information with these providers and if they don't handle it with care we could find it hacked and leaks to the world and facebook doesn't exactly have a stellar record in protecting user privacy what is your experience with online dating would you try facebook dating or is online matchmaking not your thing that is not on you tube facebook or d.w. dot com see you next time by.
11:29 pm
enter the conflict zone with tim sebastian 16 months of gone by since a saudi journalist jamal khashoggi was killed by agents of his own state my guess is as the algebra the saudi minister of state for foreign affairs why are there still so many unanswered questions about the murder and why the massive crackdown on human rights activists inside saudi arabia conflict. next on the most d.w. of the. his parish stories in madrid have always been open to everyone. being together eating together but also just refueling that was important to the rabble in the priest. down the coronavirus has changed everything. what will become a father and his own church. 30 minutes on.
11:30 pm
google ideas is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make signals greener how can we protect habitats we can make. difference little boy genius. series of little 2000 on t.w. and on mine. this was a hold up and showing that it was not authorized you still don't know what happened to the remains with mr kushner the how is that possible we don't have a history of good things are sort of 16 months have gone by since a saudi journalist jamal khashoggi was killed by agents of his own state. but the issue doesn't go away my guest this week here at the munich security conference is . the saudi minister of state for foreign affairs why are there still so many unanswered questions about the murder and why the massive crackdown.

27 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on