In the spirit of Stapel, we think
Posted: Thu May 29, 2025 5:44 am
Google organized an experiment with 150 test subjects. Unlike a 'Stapel' test, this really took place, with existing people. By the way: a powerful response from the new world is to distribute Stapel 's book 'Derailment' digitally for free. If you tell a story about stolen experiences, you should not mind that the story is stolen.
ShareSendThe book was available via ShareSend , the leak has since been stopped but the phenomenon can no longer be stopped. An illegal book on the internet is like a bump in a waterbed; you can push it away, but it will rear its head somewhere else.
Unasked questions
Back to the experiment. The experiment that was organized by Google and that journalist Tom Simonite pa list to data rticipated in and wrote about . On three days in the past month, at eight random times, he was asked on his mobile phone the question: “What have you wanted to know recently?” The goal of the experiment is to give Google insight into questions that Google would never think would ever be asked. The unasked questions, that is.
I imagine myself taking part in the experiment and start asking questions. I read the newspaper. Why would you want to have two lease cars? I walk down the street in Paris. There is a rain-soaked note on the sidewalk, “ L'apocalystisme, c'est nul ”, it says, handwritten. Who wrote it, and why? There is a long line in front of the Centre Pompidou. If I join the Dali exhibition now, how long will I have to wait?
Queue for Centre Pompidou.
ShareSendThe book was available via ShareSend , the leak has since been stopped but the phenomenon can no longer be stopped. An illegal book on the internet is like a bump in a waterbed; you can push it away, but it will rear its head somewhere else.
Unasked questions
Back to the experiment. The experiment that was organized by Google and that journalist Tom Simonite pa list to data rticipated in and wrote about . On three days in the past month, at eight random times, he was asked on his mobile phone the question: “What have you wanted to know recently?” The goal of the experiment is to give Google insight into questions that Google would never think would ever be asked. The unasked questions, that is.
I imagine myself taking part in the experiment and start asking questions. I read the newspaper. Why would you want to have two lease cars? I walk down the street in Paris. There is a rain-soaked note on the sidewalk, “ L'apocalystisme, c'est nul ”, it says, handwritten. Who wrote it, and why? There is a long line in front of the Centre Pompidou. If I join the Dali exhibition now, how long will I have to wait?
Queue for Centre Pompidou.