I see it as a big security problem if everyone can see which school / university i visited and where I'm currently working, so hardly any of my profiles contain more than my name and a picture (if at all).
Yeah I high key don't posy my face and if I do it's in a controlled environment. I also never hand out my full name. I'm the only one on the planet with a name like that so it's not worth the risk lol
@@lowwastehighmelanin Unfortunately the internet is becoming less and less anonymous, you can't log in to many websites without proof of identity, which is supposedly only for "our security" until the data is stolen by some hacker.
I do not have any social media (besides youtube if you count that), but I do say controversial things IN MY HOME, which is an apartment building next to another apartment of the very same quality and shaded by rows of townhouses. Now, the point of this is to say that I once worked at a fast food place (a famous establishment in Canada, very very well known). So not having any social media, I would work minimum 8 hours a day, surrounded by jealous miserable co-workers, getting immediate nasty - snarky looks and remarks from some of these customers, and overworking myself to meet the expectation my employer holds for. That being said, over time I would get passive remarks and doubts about my profesionalism and autenticity. One made it clear that I was "two-faced", another tried to mock mentally-ill people (there is a mental health facility near by that treats and rehabilitates individuals, and some drop by to this famous establishment) and pass me off as one of them. One particular ethnicity disliked me so much for who I am, they would cross all boundaries to see me suffer... All because I am of this origin but was born here, and I have all these imaginary opportunites awaiting for me. To make sense of what I said above, there were certain individuals tracing where I worked at and would tell my co-workers all sorts of crazy things to fit their false, pathetic narrative. Since some of the co-workers disliked me, they would use that to boost their confience and harass me from there. Over time my hours were cut, relationships soured, and health overall declined. So saving face on reputation is very difficult, unless you're a pushover or extremely artificial. Seeing how professionalism is going to decline very soon with the replacements of new, pc, bias heads and leaders, I can only imagine the poor sucker when these creeps dig up his or her social media history.
Any employer who wants to be sure about someone's experiences can just call the universities/companies that person is claiming to have gone through. Also, here in France, every serious diploma is validated by a commission mandated by the government. Some commissions have a simple request tool where anyone can input someone's name and verify its diploma. I don't see the point of nft's in that use case. Sounds like reinventing the wheel to me.
@@robustb1429 I may have forgotten to mention that the comission validate the ability of a school or university to deliver a particular degree. So it is technically already decentralised.
With the IT qualification model hopefully transitioning towards specialized certificates and away from generalized, quickly outdated university curriculums for education, SBT could be a good way to collect ones own proven knowledge and make it so employers can quickly browse through it for things the position actually requires, instead of making a list of technologies or vague terms each with a number of years attached. It will still be a question of how to verify a provider of SBTs, else providers could fake good reputation and privately sell their tokens to people. The technology itself is promising though.
We need to verify your identity to continue the online application process. Recording with the forward facing camera on your mobile device, please hit yourself in the face to continue.
@@hyellow1304 I think he meant FROM Estonia. Like he lives in Estonia and says greetings. And since I don't think English is huge in Estonia, he made a typo.
@@SoundblasterYT Oohhh thank you! lol I was thinking that's what happened as well. As an Estonian myself tho, I'd argue that most of us speak english fairly well, I guess it really depends on the individual tho
This is an issue - problem - deeply interwoven into our social and economic fabric. On the one hand, yes, it is generally in the long view better to spend the time (=money) on very personal vetting, and a professional background check which doesn't rely on whatever is online. The downside is fewer potential candidates can be covered and that in turn constricts the needle's eye that is opportunity. It seems the best we might achieve is some 100% verifiable, consistent, fair, incorruptible method of recking up reputation, as well as verifying particulars of the prose or bullet-pointed backstory provided. This was already a question by the late 1970s (probably before - definitely in a sidebar way with regard to US Social Security, its ID numbering 'system'). Hopefully and ironically now that we're all just a bit more connected, a wider brainpool can find a way. But a tipping moment is approaching after which we may as well stop worrying and learn to love the algorithm and being connected but not really connected in the ways that matter.
This is not true, and it is rubbish. So those letters... are meant to be opened by the actual hiring manager. And then.. normally... the referee, should actually have an actual phone number, that they could actually ring and discuss with the so said person as well. When somebody ask you, whether you can be their referees or not, normally they can indeed actually say "yes" or "no". A lot of people out there, often also hire so many social engineers to trip you up as well. So... Such is life, isn't it ??? The way I see our so called modern day world... This has become a destruction of life itself.
Folks, what do you do to prove your Online Reputation?
I don't have any...
@Anon Tough are you absolutely sure? what if we find something?😉
I don't.
@@nobodynoone2500 prove it
What happend to Sumsub? Who are all the new people oO
I see it as a big security problem if everyone can see which school / university i visited and where I'm currently working, so hardly any of my profiles contain more than my name and a picture (if at all).
Same
The right idea.
Yeah I high key don't posy my face and if I do it's in a controlled environment. I also never hand out my full name. I'm the only one on the planet with a name like that so it's not worth the risk lol
@@lowwastehighmelanin Unfortunately the internet is becoming less and less anonymous, you can't log in to many websites without proof of identity, which is supposedly only for "our security"
until the data is stolen by some hacker.
@@lowwastehighmelanin okay Ari
I do not have any social media (besides youtube if you count that), but I do say controversial things IN MY HOME, which is an apartment building next to another apartment of the very same quality and shaded by rows of townhouses.
Now, the point of this is to say that I once worked at a fast food place (a famous establishment in Canada, very very well known). So not having any social media, I would work minimum 8 hours a day, surrounded by jealous miserable co-workers, getting immediate nasty - snarky looks and remarks from some of these customers, and overworking myself to meet the expectation my employer holds for. That being said, over time I would get passive remarks and doubts about my profesionalism and autenticity. One made it clear that I was "two-faced", another tried to mock mentally-ill people (there is a mental health facility near by that treats and rehabilitates individuals, and some drop by to this famous establishment) and pass me off as one of them. One particular ethnicity disliked me so much for who I am, they would cross all boundaries to see me suffer... All because I am of this origin but was born here, and I have all these imaginary opportunites awaiting for me.
To make sense of what I said above, there were certain individuals tracing where I worked at and would tell my co-workers all sorts of crazy things to fit their false, pathetic narrative. Since some of the co-workers disliked me, they would use that to boost their confience and harass me from there. Over time my hours were cut, relationships soured, and health overall declined.
So saving face on reputation is very difficult, unless you're a pushover or extremely artificial. Seeing how professionalism is going to decline very soon with the replacements of new, pc, bias heads and leaders, I can only imagine the poor sucker when these creeps dig up his or her social media history.
Any employer who wants to be sure about someone's experiences can just call the universities/companies that person is claiming to have gone through.
Also, here in France, every serious diploma is validated by a commission mandated by the government. Some commissions have a simple request tool where anyone can input someone's name and verify its diploma.
I don't see the point of nft's in that use case. Sounds like reinventing the wheel to me.
The tokens bring decentralization. There would no longer be a need for the government mandated commission
@@robustb1429 I may have forgotten to mention that the comission validate the ability of a school or university to deliver a particular degree. So it is technically already decentralised.
With the IT qualification model hopefully transitioning towards specialized certificates and away from generalized, quickly outdated university curriculums for education, SBT could be a good way to collect ones own proven knowledge and make it so employers can quickly browse through it for things the position actually requires, instead of making a list of technologies or vague terms each with a number of years attached. It will still be a question of how to verify a provider of SBTs, else providers could fake good reputation and privately sell their tokens to people. The technology itself is promising though.
Alternatively: build a website and show your work. It's super easy.
Sounds like China with their Social Credit scores.
Well, Bradley has surely gone underground now.
maybe he wants us to OSINT his activities ;)
@@notrandomrandomusername8890 lol 😆
Sumsub has a reputation for never disappointing us 😀
I still waiting for the pin up posters of Emily....
This comment aged horribly
@@dj.matexx true 🤣
Social scores are coming and terrifying. 😬
We already have them in the states. It's called FICO. That can get you curved from jobs in addition to loans so...
According to the thumbnail, Lucas is over seven feet tall.
remove the space before question mark. please
We need to verify your identity to continue the online application process. Recording with the forward facing camera on your mobile device, please hit yourself in the face to continue.
Damn bro is almost 7'6 from thumbnail mugshot
How can I encrypted my iPhone also What can I use instead of a VPN?
Proxies are an alternative to a VPN, although you can always host your own VPN on a VPS
Where is Bradly?
meanwile in china use social credit system
ahh it all comes together... greetings to estonia ;)
Hi sorry would you mind explaining how Estonia is related to this?
@@hyellow1304 I think he meant FROM Estonia. Like he lives in Estonia and says greetings.
And since I don't think English is huge in Estonia, he made a typo.
@@SoundblasterYT Oohhh thank you! lol I was thinking that's what happened as well. As an Estonian myself tho, I'd argue that most of us speak english fairly well, I guess it really depends on the individual tho
@@hyellow1304 The company behind this channel is from estonia, and they provide online verification and reputation tracking.
@@hyellow1304 Yea I don't know much about estonia.
Also perhaps just a typo.
This is an issue - problem - deeply interwoven into our social and economic fabric. On the one hand, yes, it is generally in the long view better to spend the time (=money) on very personal vetting, and a professional background check which doesn't rely on whatever is online. The downside is fewer potential candidates can be covered and that in turn constricts the needle's eye that is opportunity. It seems the best we might achieve is some 100% verifiable, consistent, fair, incorruptible method of recking up reputation, as well as verifying particulars of the prose or bullet-pointed backstory provided. This was already a question by the late 1970s (probably before - definitely in a sidebar way with regard to US Social Security, its ID numbering 'system'). Hopefully and ironically now that we're all just a bit more connected, a wider brainpool can find a way. But a tipping moment is approaching after which we may as well stop worrying and learn to love the algorithm and being connected but not really connected in the ways that matter.
I think we need to devalue reputation and get to know people
No shit Sherlock
"HR Specialists" hahahahhaha. You mean the 10 years experience junior hirer's! 🤣
the alliterations are back, yay
Question” “? WHY??? Why leave a space?? Pls fix
all i could hear when he introduced mae mae was falong
Are we talking about repution of people or objects like company? Because the 2nd one 100% exists
People
It’s social credit.
Green screen?
Set design
Black ...
Mirror
@@Skreept or design set
Great video!
Holy crap. 15 years in jail for sharing information. The insanity of the US "justice" system ...
You misspelled “stealing”.
7’5”
This is not true, and it is rubbish. So those letters... are meant to be opened by the actual hiring manager. And then.. normally... the referee, should actually have an actual phone number, that they could actually ring and discuss with the so said person as well. When somebody ask you, whether you can be their referees or not, normally they can indeed actually say "yes" or "no". A lot of people out there, often also hire so many social engineers to trip you up as well. So... Such is life, isn't it ??? The way I see our so called modern day world... This has become a destruction of life itself.
We need mode certificates and less bulshit