Hey, is anyone here a ReactNative developer? I'm facing an issue of an app not going past the starting screen while running in an android emulator, any thoughts?
Here is your random fact for the day: Alexander Graham Bell created the phone (not the fact), and he wanted people to greet each other with "Ahoy-hoy" instead of "hello". (this is the fact).
Spoiler alert: his greeting wasn't really accepted by people. So, today, we greet each other with "hello", instead of "ahoy-hoy"
...I hate clickbait articles. Not because I'm enticed to click on the title but also disappointed when I remind myself I shouldn't. Never really had that problem (I know others have). I just find the clickbait titles aggravatingly stupid.
Just saw one that reached a new low. It was "what spoon are you according to your zodiac sign".
@JBis Google/FB do. And anything with google ads on the page is suspect. Or any of the big ad providers. The clickbait articles are there to drive traffic for ads, so any visit really just feeds more data to some marketing company. Or several.
They track that "it was clicked". I don't think they track "you clicked it". I could be wrong. But based on my anecdotal experience with youtube videos, it seems to work.
@JBis They also track the demographic. E.g., male, aged 21-24. Or similar. The brackets tend to be rather big, however, they are still effective at giving more ads. If some product seems to be getting more clicks by males aged 21-24 then it will be shown to more males 21-24. There are other brackets like "likes football" (e.g., you've clicked on football related stuff or visited a football website) to further refine the ads. You can fall within multiple of those, as well.
I'm talking about big ad providers here - they will be collecting data and categorising you. Once they have enough data, they can identify "you" or something very similar to "you" without having hard data. E.g., you visit pages on football, and cricket, and scale modelling while logged into your FB account (or anything to tie them together). Log out and visit them again. There is an activity of a profile that matches similar brackets to the logged in one. It's easy to make the correlation.
The data points used include fingerprinting like IP matching and machine/browser sniffing. Separately, each data point isn't nearly enough to identify "you" but taken altogether you get something more like a "male aged 21-24; uses Firefox; uses Linux; from England; subscriber of Sky; likes football; likes cricket; likes scale modelling", it's easier to correlate an "anonymous profile" with a real one when you do partial matching against this criteria. But that's not even the problem.
Leaking identity is not even required. People are a lot more predictible than they might think. It doesn't even matter if you can merge two profiles with high certanty. For effective ads, you only need to predict what a given profile is likely to go for. And with data you can find trends and more effectively sort incoming profiles to target more ads to them. E.g., a new profile comes in which is similar to the previous one but (so far) hasn't shown to like football.
Given the trends of other similar profiles, you can try serving that profile some football related ads. There is a high chance they'd be of interest. If the user clicks on some of them, you can serve it the same ads as the previous one. If you have a vast network of data collection available, trying to hide behind a private tab becomes less and less relevant. It's still easy to quickly learn and categorise the behaviour.
The algorithm still learns from it even if you then discard that profile and can't directly tie it to yourself. If you exhibit similar trends when "anonymous" and not, you'd still run the chance of getting similar ads.
@VLAZ i get your point, having hung out with a few devs who have implemented systems like those I can definitely confirm the data collection process, just your purchase history is enough for a profile to be built on you, and from there... well you know the rest