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OkCupid

 
Wikipedia: OkCupid
OkCupid
Okcupid logo.png
URL http://www.okcupid.com
Commercial? Mixed
Type of site Online dating service, Social network service
Registration Required for membership
Owner Humor Rainbow, Inc.
Created by Chris Coyne, Sam Yagan, Christian Rudder and Max Krohn
Launched 2004

OkCupid is a social networking and dating website which features member-created quizzes and supports various modes of communication: personal blogs, public forums, instant messages, emails, and "winks". It is one of the largest dating sites on the web.[1]

Contents

About

OkCupid users are presented with questions (most of which are authored, submitted, and vetted by members) about various topics such as politics and tastes page by page, and given a list of up to four answers per question to choose from. They are also asked "How would your Ideal Match answer this question?", and then "How important is their answer to you?", with degrees of importance for the latter listed as "irrelevant", "a little important", "somewhat important", "very important", and "mandatory", each respectively assigned a greater numerical value. The site uses the numerical values to calculate "friend", "enemy", and "match" percentages between any two members of the site based on how many answered questions those two users have in common (referred to as their "intersection"), with higher intersections supposedly producing more accurate percentages.

There is a very active journaling/blogging community on OkCupid as well. Members have the option of saving favorite users' profiles and then "stalking" them, which allows them to view all of their new journal entries, as well as comments on others' entries.

The journaling community frequently arranges meet-ups of OkCupid users in various areas of the world and people travel, sometimes from as far away as other countries or continents, to meet. Sites of past meet-ups include London, New Orleans, San Francisco, New York City, and Ann Arbor.

OKCupid generates revenue in two ways; via ads and a monthly subscription fee. Ads are shown on the website but can be removed when a user becomes an "A-List" member. This is accomplished by upgrading the account and subscribing to the website. The fee is $9.95 and students are offered a discount.

Technical

The Web site makes advanced use of the client-side JavaScript scripting language to generate dynamic distribution graphs. In addition, it uses the OKWS Web server (currently at version 2.0.x), which was designed by Max Krohn at MIT, to operate fast, high-load Web services.

According to the website:

Currently we have over 200,000 lines of C++ code. That's pretty much everything, except our picture upload scripts, which are in PHP. Offline, we use both perl and Python for some little maintenance programs.[2]

History

OkCupid is a service of Humor Rainbow, Inc. OkCupid’s founders, (Chris Coyne, Christian Rudder, Sam Yagan, and Max Krohn) were students at Harvard University when they gained recognition for their creation of TheSpark and, later, SparkNotes. Among other things, TheSpark.com featured a number of humorous self-quizzes and personality tests, including the four-variable Myers-Briggs style Match Test. SparkMatch debuted as a beta experiment of allowing registered users who had taken the Match Test to search for and contact each other based on their Match Test types. The popularity of SparkMatch took off and it was launched as its own site, later being renamed OkCupid. The current OkCupid Dating Persona Test is still largely identical, in question and text blurb content and order, to the original Match Test. In 2001, they sold SparkNotes to Barnes & Noble, and began work on OkCupid.[3]

In 2007, OkCupid launched Crazy Blind Date[4][5].

In 2008 OkCupid spun off its test-design portion under the name Hello Quizzy (HQ), while keeping it indelibly linked to OkCupid and reserving existent OkCupid users' names on HQ.[6]

Since at least August 4, 2009, OkCupid has included an "A-list" account option that provides additional services for a monthly fee.[7]

Sometime in the summer of 2009, OkCupid also removed vocabulary related to stalking from their website and replaced those words with the more friendly "visiting", i.e. "stalkers" of a profile become "visitors" of a profile.

See also

References

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "OkCupid" Read more