Facebook F8: Zuckerberg's dating service takes on Tinder

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Offline Toufik Ahmed Emon

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Facebook F8: Zuckerberg's dating service takes on Tinder
« on: May 02, 2018, 03:14:38 AM »
Facebook's chief has said that 2018 has been an "intense year" for his firm.

But Mark Zuckerberg also took the opportunity to unveil a dating service among other new products at his firm's annual F8 developers conference in San Jose, California.

He told his audience that the match-making feature would take privacy issues in mind and would launch "soon".

The company can ill afford another data scandal as it continues to be embroiled in the Cambridge Analytica affair.

"There are 200 million people on Facebook who list themselves as single," said Mr Zuckerberg.

"And if we are committed to building meaningful relationships, then this is perhaps the most meaningful of all."

Shares in the dating business Match Group fell more than 23% after the announcement.

It owns Tinder, a dating app that sources its profile information from Facebook.

Privacy row
Facebook has faced fierce criticism ever since it emerged that it had failed to check whether political consultancy Cambridge Analytica had deleted data harvested about millions of its users.

Mr Zuckerberg said that this was a "major breach of trust" that must never happen again.

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As part of efforts to restore confidence, he said the firm was building a new Clear History tool to provide members with more control over how their information is used.

The feature will:

let members see which third-party sites and apps Facebook collects data from
provide the ability to delete the information
prevent Facebook from being able to add such details to their profile in the future
However, in a related blog, Facebook has acknowledged that the tool will take several months to develop, and that it would still need to retain related information in "rare cases" for security reasons.

Online dating
Mr Zuckerberg also addressed his company's efforts to tackle fake news and detect operations designed to disrupt elections.

But while he opted not to unveil a smart speaker - which the BBC understands had once been destined to launch at F8 - he did introduce other novelties.

Image copyrightFACEBOOK
The headline feature is a new service to help singletons on the platform meet potential dates.

He said the opt-in feature would focus on "real long-term relationships, not just hook-ups", and would exclude existing friends from potential matches.

"We have designed this with privacy and safety in mind from the beginning," he added.

Source: BBC
Toufik Ahmed Emon
Lecturer
Dept. of Computer Science & Engineering
Daffodil International University
Dhaka, Bangladesh