calibas 1 day ago

I see these on Facebook and have avoided them. Isn't the whole point of the "tests" to collect personal data?

I don't know if it's "a new type of psychological myth" so much as a scam.

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glenstein 1 day ago

I wouldn't doubt that the possibility is there using it that way. But it just seems really impractical and inefficient. I think serious efforts at collecting personal data, involving databases and scripting to scrape data from websites that would not otherwise want to freely give it up, compromising passwords and so on. I don't know what actionable data you get from learning that someone judges a particular ink blot to look like a butterfly.

I think the explanation for their prevalence is just that they found their place in the regular churn of memes, jokes, and quizzes on social media.

calibas 1 day ago

I don't believe it has anything to do with the results of the test, they probably just toss that out. It's that you grant these companies partial access to your Facebook account when you take these quizzes.

https://www.aclu.org/news/national-security/quiz-what-do-fac...