IIRC you need to have a certain number of "real" fb friends (I'm assuming they judge this by connections to one another) to access it. A female friend of mine told me about it and showed me my ratings a few months ago. Cringeworthy.
And the worst part is you can't get your profile deleted. I've had several male friends personally email the founder and she won't delete ratings or profiles.
Your friends should create a similar app for men to rate women they've dated. Whether it gets accepted or rejected, it'll provide an interesting insight into the minds of feminists(anti-sexism, equality, true feminists. not women-are-better-than-men wannabes).
>"This demographic "dates" less and increasingly relies on social media to communicate."
This is at least a quantitative and verifiable claim. But similar statements could be made about the rise of the telephone, or the cultural/temporal shift from courtship to long-term relationships that aren't marriage. What of it?
>"As a result, the depth of their relationships is relatively shallow compared to those of older generations at the same point in their lives."
Categorically dismissing an entire demographic's ability to care about other human beings is kind of a big deal. This is a non-obvious and offensive claim. It could be true, but it definitely requires support; instead, you treat it like it's self-evident.
It's a favorite tidbit of conventional wisdom among columnists, sure. It has truthiness and makes its audience feel good about themselves, kind of like "the terrorists hate us for our freedom." That doesn't make it a psychological truth.
I also believe Lulu is a Bad Thing - people change, have different tastes, behave differently under different circumstances, are unduly influenced by others' opinions, could be mysteriously and permanently cut off from any chance at a relationship literally overnight by pissing off one articulate and/or creative Lulu user, etc. These are merely practical problems, before you even get into the ethical concerns of treating people like mass-produced goods.
But people who need to hear that are not going to be terribly interested in what you have to say after you openly insult them.
This is a stalking app, pure and simple. As the author says, it is for shallow people who are only interested in shallow relationships. Sooner or later, this app will lead to physical violence.
No need to be scared of Lulu unless you are one of the fools who actually uses it. For most people, this is nothing and in a couple of years it will be forgotten as one in a long string of silly hot or not apps.
10 comments
[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 37.5 ms ] threadThis is at least a quantitative and verifiable claim. But similar statements could be made about the rise of the telephone, or the cultural/temporal shift from courtship to long-term relationships that aren't marriage. What of it?
>"As a result, the depth of their relationships is relatively shallow compared to those of older generations at the same point in their lives."
Categorically dismissing an entire demographic's ability to care about other human beings is kind of a big deal. This is a non-obvious and offensive claim. It could be true, but it definitely requires support; instead, you treat it like it's self-evident.
It's a favorite tidbit of conventional wisdom among columnists, sure. It has truthiness and makes its audience feel good about themselves, kind of like "the terrorists hate us for our freedom." That doesn't make it a psychological truth.
I also believe Lulu is a Bad Thing - people change, have different tastes, behave differently under different circumstances, are unduly influenced by others' opinions, could be mysteriously and permanently cut off from any chance at a relationship literally overnight by pissing off one articulate and/or creative Lulu user, etc. These are merely practical problems, before you even get into the ethical concerns of treating people like mass-produced goods.
But people who need to hear that are not going to be terribly interested in what you have to say after you openly insult them.
No need to be scared of Lulu unless you are one of the fools who actually uses it. For most people, this is nothing and in a couple of years it will be forgotten as one in a long string of silly hot or not apps.