<div dir="ltr"><a href="http://www.techtimes.com/articles/159277/20160518/cache-of-70-000-leaked-okcupid-profiles-taken-down-following-copyright-notice.htm">http://www.techtimes.com/articles/159277/20160518/cache-of-70-000-leaked-okcupid-profiles-taken-down-following-copyright-notice.htm</a><br><p>Last week, a team of Danish researchers intentionally <a style="font-family:Arial,Tahoma,Helvetica,sans-serif" href="http://www.techtimes.com/articles/158482/20160514/researchers-intentionally-leak-70-000-okcupid-profiles-for-science.htm" target="_blank">leaked</a> information of 70,000 profiles on online dating website OkCupid.</p>
<p>The researchers used automated software to scrape data from the
profiles of users and then published the information online on the Open
Science Framework. The real names of the users remain hidden, but their
user names and locations are accessible, along with their answers to the
questions asked by the website and its app.</p>
<p>The researchers underlined the fact that the data was publicly
available, but collecting information on a massive scale without the
consent of users could be considered a major privacy breach. Many
privacy advocates have <a href="http://www.techtimes.com/articles/158498/20160515/okcupid-leaking-70-000-okcupid-users-personal-data-in-name-of-science-is-not-ok.htm" target="_blank">called</a> the actions of the researchers as unethical.</p>
<p>In the latest update regarding the incident, the Open Science Framework has <a href="http://retractionwatch.com/2016/05/16/publicly-available-data-on-thousands-of-okcupid-users-pulled-over-copyright-claim/" target="_blank">taken down</a> the
dataset uploaded by the researchers. The data was removed due to a
copyright notice that was sent by OkCupid to the website.</p>
<p>"The repository is currently unavailable due to a [Digital Millennium
Copyright Act] claim sent by OkCupid. It's unclear to me which part
they claim copyright on," said Emil Kirkegaard, a masters student at
Denmark's Aarhus University and one of the researchers behind the
debacle.</p>
<p>The DMCA, a law in the United States that allows companies to request
for data to be taken down from websites, is often utilized by companies
to <a href="http://motherboard.vice.com/read/okcupid-research-paper-dmca" target="_blank">prevent</a> hacked data from being shared.</p>
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<p>Aarhus University has <a href="https://twitter.com/AarhusUni/status/731088637547446272">disavowed</a> Kirkegaard,
claiming that his research and his methods are not considered to be
practices tolerated by the institution. The university has launched its
own investigation into the case.</p>
<p>Kirkegaard and his fellow researchers believed that they did not need
to ask permission from OkCupid's users, as all the information from the
profiles can be searched through Google. The researchers did not expect
their work to lead to such controversy, as they only wanted to
contribute a dataset to the Open Science Framework that other
researchers can use.</p><br></div>