• TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    In some ways I can see this being potentially problematic, however…

    For-profit dating apps (i.e. all dating apps) are shit.

    Not only do they aggressively restrict a lot of basic features behind shockingly expensive paywalls, but they also mess around with the recommendation algorithm to make you feel like you feel like you have to get the premium tier in order to even be seen sometimes.

    Plus they’re literally incentivised to keep you on the app - not match you up with someone permanently. And once you’ve proven you’re someone who’s willing to pay, they really won’t want to let you go.

    A publicly-owned dating app shouldn’t have these issues. Japan is incentivised to make good matches - they want to boost birthrates and curb the loneliness pandemic they’re experiencing.

    I just hope Japan is a country that takes privacy and security seriously.

    E: btw I mean publicly owned as in owned by the Japanese public, not as in publicly traded.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.zipBanned from community
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      2 years ago

      A publicly-owned dating app shouldn’t have these issues.

      If someone’s job inside that company, even publicly owned, depends on the amount of users, they are incentivized to do all the same things. And publicly-owned companies too try to be kinda profitable sometimes. There’s also corruption.

      EDIT:

      I just hope Japan is a country that takes privacy and security seriously.

      Governments don’t.

      • magic_lobster_party@kbin.run
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        2 years ago

        Governments are incentivized to match people to combat declining birth rates. Lower birth rates means fewer productive people to support an aging population. It’s also loss in taxes.

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.zipBanned from community
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          2 years ago

          Governments have no incentives. People working in them have some. Having more youngsters questioning what they are doing, working and thus not relying on aid, may be less convenient than all those old people living on pensions voting for something stupid.

          • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            Governments have no incentives. People working in them have some.

            By this logic, companies also aren’t incentivised to do anything, just the people working in them.

            Governments do have incentives. Saying they don’t is absurd.

            • rottingleaf@lemmy.zipBanned from community
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              2 years ago

              Correct. Companies are not. And what they do makes sense if you look at it this way. You could even notice how this reinforces the leftist positions on economics popular here, if your thinking were just a bit more agile.

              Saying they don’t is absurd.

              This is not very persuasive and seems to lack any elaboration of how would that work. From the ground up, like every good elaboration does.

              Governments do have incentives.

              Which ones then? I’m certain I’ll be able to disprove any of them.