What is quizbait?

Some time ago, I coined the term “quizbait” as a portmanteau of quiz and bait, along the lines of clickbait and linkbait, the kind of trivial endpoint you reach when you get suckered into following a URL to something trivial, untrustworthy or fake. It’s everywhere and as my incredibly social media savvy friend Jo Brodie points out it is a risk to privacy.

She tells me that every time she sees that a friend has taken one of these tests or quizzes on Facebook and shared their results, she blocks the app the friend used. This is good practice, “because, when you authorise the app to interact with your page, it is then able to interact with mine because you can see my page and the app can access what you can access,” she explains. She adds that it is a safe assumption to make from the common app terms and conditions and the way in which Facebook seems to work that the apps can even access your non-public information via the friend allowing the app into their account.

Worst are those “easy” quizzes that suck in a lot of users because they presumably want to check that they’re really clever…of course, the quiz, like any marketing/ad campaign or other intrusion doesn’t care that you take the quiz nor how clever you reveal yourself to be. It simply wants access to that prized commodity of the digital age – data. Data = Money. Giving access to all your data for free is a bad thing because you might not even realise just how much personal, private and sensitive information you have locked up in your Facebook and other social media accounts…but, of course, the algorithms can access that and work it out, pulling out all kinds of interesting titbits about you and your peccadillos, health concerns, relationships and finances.

Quizbait is insidious. Don’t fall for it. And, make sure you block the apps that friends share when they take the bait. Here’s the link – https://www.facebook.com/settings?tab=blocking

It occurred to me as I was writing this that once the app has access it will have harvested all the data within seconds or minutes. Blocking will protect only new data from that particular app.

Meanwhile, I defined quizbait for the Urban Dictionary.

From Ayer’s Rock to Uluru

As of the time of writing, November 2017, it’s almost 28 years to the day that Mrs Sciencebase and myself (although we weren’t Mr&Mrs at the time and Sciencebase didn’t exist) backpacked our way around Australia. Greyhounding from Melbourne to Adelaide, North through Coober Pedy to the Red Centre, Alice and Uluru, onward to

the Top End via Kakadu to Darwin, then back across to Townsville up to Cairns, Magnetic Island, and the Great Barrier Reef and back down the East Coast through Brisbane, Newcastle, Sydney, Canberra, and back to Melbourne.

The sacred site of Uluru was an important pilgrimage and at the time, the site told you it was hazardous to climb and that dogs, bikes, and camping were not allowed. Although the Anangu people had been encouraging visitors not to climb for a couple of years in 1989, they had not banned the climb and we were told that the Anangu got a percentage of the takings from backpackers and tourists visiting. Looking back, that’s probably unlikely given how the people of Australia have been treated historically.

As of 2019, climbing the sacred site will be banned. UPDATE: The last climbers took to the chain on 25th October 2019.