you've clearly never been to korea. those aren't my photos.
every time anyone buys anything from any business in korea ... you'll see the automatic reflex to take a photo and document it. it's the most 'online' society on earth.
korea has a social media site/app called naver. think google+facebook+news+paypal+shopping+taxis+yahoo answers all in one. i can pull up any business using their 'maps' function and not only see the menu/prices, but also see 1000s of photos posted of their food and venue by korean patrons. another facet of the naver ecosystem is a 'blog' or facebook-style wall. it's very common for koreans to write small mini-blogs with pictures of any restaurant, café, museum, etc, they visit. they document their days out and socialise in this way. there's even reviews with photos for your average neighbourhood grocery store. the whole city has been mapped this way.
i just pulled those photos from naver.
i can pull up a hairdressers on naver, look at their prices, look at a list of their individual stylists, read their biographies and, again, see their reviews and photographs of their work, crowdsourced from other koreans. then i can use naver to book an appointment at that hairdressers. then i can use naver payments to book and pay for that appointment. there's even special discount offers for naver bookings. i actually save money doing it this way.
but yeah, '10 years ago'. it's the west who are dawdling in the past, m80. so whilst it seems silly that koreans are forever photographing their food and documenting their most banal café or shopping experience, they're actually hive-minding a vast repository of collective knowledge and consumer smarts. neat!
Last edited by uziq (2022-07-13 04:47:46)