You May Have Forgotten Foursquare, But It Didn't Forget You (wired.com) 60
nj_peeps shares an excerpt from a report via Wired: [Foursquare cofounder Dennis Crowley says the company is working on a new game.] Think Candyland, but instead of fantasy locations like Lollipop Woods, the game's virtual board includes place categories associated with New York City neighborhoods. There's a Midtown Bar, a Downtown Movie Theatre, Brooklyn Coffeeshop, Uptown Park, and so on. As in Candyland, you move your game piece forward by drawing cards. But in Crowley's version, the cards are the habits and locations of real people whose data has been turned into literal pawns in the game. Foursquare knows where their phones are in real time, because it powers many widely used apps, from Twitter and Uber to TripAdvisor and AccuWeather. These people aren't playing Crowley's game, but their real-world movements animate it: If one of them goes into a bar in midtown, for example, the person playing the game would get a Midtown Bar card.
Ask someone about Foursquare and they'll probably think of the once-hyped social media company, known for gamifying mobile check-ins and giving recommendations. But the Foursquare of today is a location-data giant. During an interview with NBC in November, the company's CEO, Jeff Glueck, said that only Facebook and Google rival Foursquare in terms of location-data precision. You might think you don't use Foursquare, but chances are you do. Foursquare's technology powers the geofilters in Snapchat, tagged tweets on Twitter; it's in Uber, Apple Maps, Airbnb, WeChat, and Samsung phones, to name a few.
Ask someone about Foursquare and they'll probably think of the once-hyped social media company, known for gamifying mobile check-ins and giving recommendations. But the Foursquare of today is a location-data giant. During an interview with NBC in November, the company's CEO, Jeff Glueck, said that only Facebook and Google rival Foursquare in terms of location-data precision. You might think you don't use Foursquare, but chances are you do. Foursquare's technology powers the geofilters in Snapchat, tagged tweets on Twitter; it's in Uber, Apple Maps, Airbnb, WeChat, and Samsung phones, to name a few.
A Strange Game (Score:5, Funny)
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The only move is not to give a shit, there is no winning.
Use a smart phone: get tracked (Score:4, Interesting)
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"Can this be right? Looks like this one user, 'Sheramil' divides their time between shitposting on Slashdot and buying Pepsi Max at the nearest supermarket. We can't monetize this."
Steal my data if you will. It has no value.
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Hello there. Pepsi here!
If you scratch off the 'Slashdot' sticker that's permanently attached to your monitor, you will find a code underneath. Fill in this code on our website and win a year long Pepsi Max!
You can participate as often as you want. Winners are randomly selected from the top-1000 of most popular websites.
P.S. Thanks facebook, google, twitter and linkedin for your identifiable data, we will forward it to the pimple removal and weight loss pharmacies as we have some interesting statistical fac
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Use an iPhone and switch of "allow access to your geo location" for every app, problem solved.
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How are you supposed to use Uber or Apple Maps without location tracking?
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First off, I refuse to use Uber because I think they're assholes who have claimed magical unicorn poop exempts them from taxi laws.
Second, if I need navigation, I have my nice TomTom which is offline, free of ads and analytics, and isn't dependent on a cell signal.
Not all of us have bought into the bullshit notion that our lives would be incomplete without being spied on by our phones.
Apps can kiss my ass, because they're primarily jus
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You can't. If you don't want to be tracked, get a paper map (they do still exist!) and call a taxi (they still exist, too!).
You write that post as if it's impossible to live without Uber and Apple Maps. You know that people lived just fine without those things just a few years ago, and lots of people (myself included) live full, complete lives without phone maps and Uber now, right?
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and call a taxi (they still exist, too!).
Yeah, hard pass on that one. I've never taken a taxi in a "big city", but I've taken plenty in relatively smaller ones. (Think places like Bismarck ND) There were 2 taxi companies, neither of which gave a shit about anything. Their cabs were dilapidated piles of crap that smelled like piss, vomit, and body odor. Their drivers were rude and drove like they've seen too many action movies. And good luck getting a ride home after bar close, on a slow night it would be a half hour, on a busy night you're b
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For Uber you don't need location tracking.
That a map app might need the location is obvious. So: what has it to do with the topic?
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There is a way around it: make it illegal.
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You're suggesting regulations on business? Why do you hate America?
Foursquare is still a thing?!? (Score:2)
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You use Foursquare all the time without knowing it. And they use you all the time without you knowing it also.
Who else? (Score:2)
You might think you don't use Foursquare, but chances are you do. Foursquare's technology powers the geofilters in Snapchat, tagged tweets on Twitter; it's in Uber, Apple Maps, Airbnb, WeChat, and Samsung phones, to name a few.
Where can I find the full list? Because I don't use any of those, either. /smirk
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Foursquare is now working behind-the-scenes with Asia's biggest social networks [mashable.com] — June 2017
This brain damage appears to concern fairly recent models. I'm about six generations further behind, so my mandatory security practice is to enable my data modem less than once a month, a
In Soviet Russia ... (Score:2)
Forgotten? (Score:2)
Four Square? (Score:2)
I was unaware that it had a meaning newer than the playground game that was popular when I was in grade school.
Ingress and Pokemon Go already do this (Score:2)
And they manage to do it in a less creepy way by not tracking the players in realtime.
Or at least not making the tracking data available to other players.
It's not a bug, it's by design. Same as ever. (Score:2)
The reality is you're going to be tracked. The question is how much data you choose to give up. As with other forms of privacy (financial, medical, personal) the system is s
"Literal pawns"??? Literally? (Score:2)