Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2025-04-14 17:39:50| Fast Company

Daters: It might be time to spring clean your dating app profile. More than 50% of young Americans have gone on a date with someone who looked different from their profile photos, according to a new survey from dating app Hily. Thats led 54% of Gen Z and 62% of millennial daters to either end a date early or decline a second one, Hily found after surveying 3,700 dating app users earlier this month. “For a variety of reasons, quite a few people dont regularly update their profile pics, some not even when their looks change,” the company wrote in an accompanying blog post. “Women tend to be afraid of being judged for their appearance, while men feel like the content of their profile doesnt make a difference. A lot of women and men just dont know what to put in their profiles.” About 10% of daters admitted theyre “unlikely to change their profile pics, even if their appearance changes.” But thats a small share overall: Hily said 84% of women and 83% of men have updated their profiles within the past six months. Still, many young daters will say their pictures may not be 100% true to reality. The survey found that around 45% of Gen Z and 33% of millennials view their own profile pictures as close to their actual looks, but not quite there. This likely fits into the broader public sentiment of users being dismayed with dating apps. According to a 2023 Pew survey, online daters are relatively divided over whether their experiences on the apps have been either positive or negative. If you go on enough dates with people you weren’t expecting to go on dates with (a.k.a.: you were catfished), you’ll likely become a bit jaded with the experience. Take this as your sign to double-check your profileand maybe swap out a few photos while youre at it.


Category: E-Commerce

 

LATEST NEWS

2025-04-14 17:00:00| Fast Company

Attention! There is now just one day left until the deadline for this year’s tax filing. And the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has already reminded taxpayers to “act now” to pay whatever they owe on their 2024 taxes, or request an extension, before April 15. Fewer Americans have filed their federal taxes, and more have requested extensions, compared with the same period last year, according to CNN, which reviewed the IRS data. According to those numbers, as of March 21, the IRS had received nearly one million fewer tax returns, or 1.1% less, than it received in the same point in the filing cycle last year. While experts told CNN this was not a reason for concern, and that in fact, previous years also showed declines over the same period, there is a lot that’s different about this year’s tax season. It comes amid massive IRS staff cuts (with more likely on the way) due to interference from Elon Musks Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE); and internal conflicts inside the agency, underscored by the recent resignation of the acting IRS chair, stemming from DOGE’s attempts to access millions of taxpayers’ personal and financial data, including that of undocumented immigrants. Tax experts told Kiplinger they have noticed a host of problems this tax season, including delays, a lack of customer service, and audit errors. In addition, DOGE’s mandatory return-to-work policy appears to be wreaking havoc at the agency, resulting in staffers having to work out of cafeterias and conference rooms due to a lack of space, as they navigate hallways littered with boxes of paperwork, according to Business Insider, which spoke with eight IRS employees. IRS: ‘There is still time to file electronically” The agency said there is still time to file federal income tax returns electronically to receive a refund via direct deposit. Filing electronically is usually the fastest way to receive tax refunds. “Filing electronically reduces tax return errors as tax software does the calculations, flags common errors and prompts taxpayers for missing information,” the IRS said in a statement. “Most taxpayers qualify for electronic filing at no cost and, when they choose direct deposit, usually receive their refund within 21 days.” Free electronic tax filing options Taxpayers with an adjusted gross income of $84,000 or less in 2024 can use IRS Free File, the IRS’s own electronic filing software, from now until October 15. Meanwhile, the IRS’s Direct File is available to eligible taxpayers in 25 states to file their 2024 federal tax returns online directly with the IRS. Go to the Direct File website for more information about Direct File eligibility and the 25 participating states.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-04-14 16:00:00| Fast Company

Lawrence Cappello is an award-winning professor of U.S. legal & constitutional history at the University of Alabama and a graduate of New York City Public Schools. He is the author of None of Your Damn Business: Privacy in the United States from the Gilded Age to the Digital Age (University of Chicago Press) and a certified information privacy professional (CIPP/US & CIPM). His work on the right to privacy has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, The Economist, The Hill, and other media outlets. Whats the big idea? In an age of constant connectivity, privacy can feel like a thing of the pastbut award-winning professor Lawrence Cappello makes a compelling case for why it still matters. With 20 sharp, practical lessons, On Privacy explores how privacy protects free societies, enhances personal well-being, and is worth defending. Designed for those who want to stay connected without sacrificing their personal space, it offers clear, actionable steps to safeguard privacy in everyday life. Concise, practical, and no-nonsense, On Privacy is a must-read guide to reclaiming control in the digital age. Below, Lawrence shares five key insights from his new book, On Privacy: Twenty Lessons to Live By. Listen to the audio versionread by Lawrence himselfin the Next Big Idea App. 1. Why privacy matters. There are parts of your life that are simply nobody elses business. Thats not paranoiathats just being human. It doesnt matter if youre liberal or conservative, rich or pooreveryone, on a fundamental level, has a desire to keep certain aspects of their life private. Privacy is essential for human dignity. Privacy acts as a shield against people who would take snippets of information out of context to attack our reputations or manipulate us for their own personal benefit. And in the internet age, this is happening a lot more often. Privacy also creates space for intimacy. We share our secrets with the people we love and trust. Its a crucial building block for establishing the trust needed to forge and maintain deep bonds with our friends and loved ones. For many of us, these bonds are the very best part of being alive. And it keeps us from being prisoners of our recorded past. A mistake you made at 16 shouldnt define you at 40. But without privacy, our worst moments follow us forever. It also protects our mental health. Everyone needs time alone to think, to recharge, to just be. Without privacy, we never get a break from the noise Most importantly, privacy is a precondition for freedom. Tyrants invade privacy to accumulate power, suppress dissent, and control their citizens. If a society calls itself free, it must protect privacybecause without it, freedom is just an illusion. 2. How to respond when someone says: If youre not doing anything wrong, you should have nothing to hide. Youve heard it before: If youre not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to hide. That argument sounds reasonableuntil you think about it for more than five seconds. People have been throwing this line around since the time of the Caesars, and it was just as stupid then as it is now. When you look at it closely, you realize this argument is just another way of saying that all secrets are bad. That privacy is only for criminals or people doing something sinful. But thats nonsense. Secrets arent sinful. We all have secrets, and theyre not just normaltheyre essential. The secrets between romantic partners or close friends build trust and intimacy. The secrets between doctors and patients create a space where people can be honest about their health and their fears. The secrets between business associates protect innovation and keep creative ideas from being stolen. Secrets arent sinful. And really, how interesting can you really be if you dont have any secrets? The problem is that all of our personal information today exists in snippets. And when taken out of context, these snippets can be twisted, misinterpreted, or weaponized against us. In the Internet Age, this happens constantly. People make snap judgments. Bad actors manipulate narratives. Reputation-damaging leaks happen in seconds. So, no, its not about hiding anything. Its about controlling how were seen and making sure our private lives arent distorted or exploited by people who dont have our best interests at heart. 3. Three quick ways you can protect your privacy right now. Cover your webcam. It sounds paranoiduntil you realize that hackers can and do hijack webcams all the time. A simple slide cover or even a piece of tape blocks prying eyes. They cost about three dollars. Think about some of the more intimate things you do in front of your laptop. Now, think about the things your kids, your partner, or your loved ones might also do. Do you want a stranger in a position to record that? I dont know one person who works in tech that doesnt have a slide over their laptopand you should, too. Use old-school passcodes for your phone, not FaceID or fingerprints. A six-digit passcode for your phone might feel old-school, but its still one of the most effective ways to keep your data locked down. Biometric security like FaceID and fingerprints may feel futuristic, but theyre getting easier to hack. Nobody can hack your brain. You can be forced, legally or physically, to unlock your phone with your face or fingerprint. Its way harder to make you spit out your passcode. Open your phone and check your app permissions. Right now, theres a good chance some app on your phone has access to your microphone or camera, even if it doesnt need it. Some apps default to always listening, always tracking. Take two minutes to check your settings and shut off unnecessary access. Youll be shocked at whats running in the background. None of these are drastic steps. Theyre low effort, high reward ways to instantly boost your privacy. 4. If you want change, make privacy profitable. In America, money talks. We need to show companies that they can get rich by protecting privacy. The good news is that this is already happening. Have you seen an Apple commercial in the last couple of years? They built a whole ad campaign around the slogan PRIVACYTHATS IPHONE. Google, as well, runs ads for privacy all the time. Have you been on a subway or bus in a major metro area lately? Clever ads for VPNs are everywhere. Did you know that the fastest-growing company in America in 2020 was a firm that helps businesses build privacy plans? Privacy is now a commodity, and the market is responding. Privacy-first productsVPNs, encrypted messaging apps,password managersare booming. Did you know that the fastest-growing company in America in 2020 was a firm that helps businesses build privacy plans? Why? Because consumers are demanding it. So many privacy invasions revolve around money. If we want real, lasting change, we need to make privacy profitable. That means spending money on privacy-first products and calling out companies that exploit data, because bad press affects the bottom line. If you want companies to care about privacy, make it worth their while. If youre betting on Congress to fix this, youll be waiting quite a while. 5. Privacy isnt dead. People say all the time that privacy is deadand to those people, I say go hand your unlocked phone to a stranger for five minutes and try not to have a panic attack. If privacy were truly dead, cybersecurity wouldnt be a trillion-dollar industry. Companies spend fortunes protecting their data. Governments guard their secrets. Even the people who claim they dont care about privacy still use passcodes, delete messages, and think twice before posting certain things online. Ive never met anybody who wants their text messages exposed to the public. Or their emails. Or their search history. The truth of it is that we have way less privacy than we used to, and people are exhausted. Theyve been told privacy is dead for so long that they no longer know what to fight for. Ive never met anybody who wants their text messages exposed to the public. So, lets get real about it. Instead of making privacy some impossible, all-or-nothing battle, we need to cut through the noise and focus on what kinds of privacy actually matter to peoplewhat they instinctively protect in their daily lives. And because this issue has become so tangled, the last thing we need is academic jargon or overcomplication (and I say this as a professor). What people need are clear, practical solutions. The first step to protecting privacy is being able to explain why it matters in a way anyone can understand. Thats what this very short book isa practical guide, written in plain-spoken language, that cuts through the complexity. So, if youve ever felt overwhelmed by privacy debates or know someone who has, On Privacy was written with you in mind. Lets start having smarter, saner conversations about privacybecause its not dead. Privacy matters. And it is worth protecting. This article originally appeared in Next Big Idea Club magazine and is reprinted with permission.


Category: E-Commerce

 

Latest from this category

20.04Meeting hangovers are draining your team. Heres how to cure them 
20.04Musks DOGE is shuttering OSHAs office in Cancer Alleydespite how dangerous it is
20.04The Rehearsal Season 2 will make you think differently about plane crashesand standing up to your boss
20.04No, you do not really need $1.26 million to retire
20.04Why using shorthand like thx and k in texting is hurting your relationships
20.04Whats open and closed on Easter Sunday? Grocery stores, Walmart, Target, pharmacies, more
20.04Nuclear power is booming. Where will we put the waste?
20.04How leaders can build a culture of wellness that actually works
E-Commerce »

All news

21.04Monday Watch
21.04'I was careful and followed instructions closely, but still lost my crypto'
21.04US assets decline amid tariff, Fed consternation
21.04Gatwick worst airport in UK for flight delays
21.04Rupee recovery gives importers a good hedging opportunity
21.04Five ways for first-time buyers to get on the housing ladder
21.04Five ways for first-time buyers to get on the housing ladder
21.04Nifty on a strong uptrend, could aim at 24,550-24,850
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .