The Timaru Herald

Do you dare to play Double Dog?

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Not a day goes by now that we don’t hear about yet another email hack.

So once again, we have to hit you, dear readers, over the head with some email basics. Somehow, really smart people haven’t been paying attention, so even if this seems remedial, take a moment and let it sink in.

Be careful with your emotions and what you write about other people in emails, unless you want them broadcast to the world. Because there’s a really good chance they will be. In other words, if you have anything bad to say about anyone, don’t say it. Use another forum.

Because your emails will get hacked, they will get seen, copied and pasted, shared, passed around, with words that could come back to haunt you.

The examples of folks letting their guards down in emails are so numerous.

So what to do? For starters, if you Are you a watcher or a player?

So asks the fictional game in the new movie Nerve, which opens in New Zealand next week.

It stars Emma Roberts (Eric’s daughter and Julia’s niece) as Vee, a shy teen who finds instant internet fame when she joins an online game called Nerve, sort of a version of truth or dare - only without the truth - played online.

In the game, users sign up as players to complete the dares, and when they do earn cash and fame. Others pay to be watchers.

Vee kicks things off by kissing a stranger (Dave Franco) in a diner.

From there, they complete dares together and naturally fall for each other. Things take a sinister turn, though, when the watchers begin to manipulate them. It’s a cautionary tale, of course, on the voyeuristi­c state of the internet. And although the game within Nerve is fictitious, an app that was released this week sounds very similar - although it is not directly associated with the movie.

Double Dog is a game that allows users to send and receive dares within the community on the app. They can potentiall­y earn money after posting a video of the completed dare.

The app is free and available in New Zealand for Android and Apple phones. Users start by daring each other to do things. The app has suggestion­s that range from licking your elbow to writing your name with your left hand to streaking in public.

You can also write your own dare. You can dare a friend or a random person selected for you. Users attach a worth to the dare, known as ‘‘bones’’ (you can play with real money if you’re 18 or older).

If that person decides to do the dare, he or she provides video or picture proof. They can also ‘‘double dog’’ the sender for twice the value, meaning the darer must now do the dare or pay triple.

It goes on and on, and the game’s glory is to become a ‘‘top dog’’ on its leaderboar­d. It’s pretty silly, really, and innocent enough - for now. Game developers swear the game has safety precaution­s built in. The site also allows users to flag and report any inappropri­ate behaviour. TNS

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 ??  ?? Emma Roberts and Dave Franco in a scene from Nerve.
Emma Roberts and Dave Franco in a scene from Nerve.

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