By
Jul 07, 2021
Finding ways to connect fans and their K-pop idols, UNIVERSE has launched its Private Message Exam, and CRAVITY is the first to test it out!
NCSoft and Klap uploaded the first episode of the Private Message Exam last July 6 on the UNIVERSE app as well as on social networking sites (SNS) such as YouTube.
In it, the nine CRAVITY members - Serim, Allen, Jungmo, Woobin, Wonjin, Minhee, Hyeongjun, Taeyoung, and Seongmin - are shown seated orderly, each with their own desks.
(Photo : Klap)
They took a test to find out their Private Message type, which aims to classify its users - both idols and fans - by answering 10 questions. Respondents are then classified into one of the eight types. Through the new service, which launched on the UNIVERSE app last July 5, the service can better understand the users personalities, their behavior toward private messaging, and the type that would suit them well. The Private M
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More than eight in ten people in Canada use online private messaging apps, like Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp; and over half are receiving messages about the news or current events at least weekly. Without greater transparency from the private platforms themselves and investment in digital literacy efforts, this growing vector for online news will continue to spread disinformation and other online harms.
The Cybersecure Policy Exchange at Ryerson University analyzed the role of private messaging in Canada, including user exposure to disinformation, hate speech and spam, and recommended potential policy and technical approaches to mitigate harms.
Their new report, Private Messages, Public Harms, used results from a representative survey conducted in March 2021 of 2,500 people in Canada and found that: