The Internet
The Internet: Information Superhighway or dating tool?
It used to be that you had to take a guy's word for it. Now, all you need is a
good search engine.
Among the Internet's many uses, following your stocks, ordering books, doing
research, you can also find out if that guy you met at a party last night
really does direct the show "Felicity."
That's how it started for me, how the Information Superhighway became a dating
tool. I just had to check one little fact that seemed fishy. The next thing I
knew, I was reading reviews of this guy's short film (excellent, I might add),
learning where he went to school and that he did, indeed, direct episodic
television.
I didn't stop there. At the time, I was working at a job that subscribed to the
Cadillac of search engines, a little slice of digital paradise called
Lexis-Nexis. This is perhaps the most advanced search engine available, used by
lawyers and reporters and boasting news stories from every source, large and
small. It also tells you whether someone is involved in legal cases, owns
property, holds licenses and just about everything else short of blood type.
That's how I found out there was something fishy about my guy. From the looks
of things, he seemed to co-own property. With his wife.
"Are you, by any chance, married?" I asked.
"Well, kind of," he replied. And I was kind of out of there as fast as you can
say "Sorry, pal, I have the Internet and I know how to use it."
Once I got a taste of the power of research, I couldn't stop myself. The next
guy I dated was all over the Internet. I thought I hit pay dirt when I found a
story from his college newspaper. He'd returned to give a speech about a famous
playwright for whom he'd worked. That's when I realized I could use the
Internet to become his dream girl.
I found a way to mention that playwright in an e-mail, to drop other little
facts, to make it seem, miraculously, that his soul-mate had materialized.
I must say I felt like I had something of an unfair advantage, like I was
peeking at his cards, sprinting on steroids, boxing with rocks in my gloves.
Not that winning someone over is a competitive sport, but I felt like I was
cheating and that tends to take the fun out of any victory.
Ironically, It's a lot like my diary over the past two years is readily
available to anyone with a computer and a modicum of curiosity. One guy I went
out with did a little search and before long, he was sitting down to read about
200 articles I'd written. That man had a lot of free time.
Before I even knew him, he had read obituaries I wrote for a newspaper when I
was 19. He knew about my crazy family, ghetto neighborhood, dateless New Year's
eves, desire for a cat and worst of all, the trail of broken relationships I've
left in my wake. Just a few years ago, a guy would have to be a serious psycho
to head on down to the library and start working those user-unfriendly
microfiche for information; now, it seems almost remiss if he hasn't at least
Yahoo-d his way through a couple of my columns.
It's a conundrum. I don't want a guy to know everything about me when it's too
soon for him to see the warts, but I appreciate when someone cares enough to
snoop the very best.
Obviously, I'm not the only Nosy Nellie on the Internet. I've gotten dozens of
Spam e-mails selling me snoop software.
"Ready to know? Get the software that was banned in 50 states! Why? Because
these secrets were never intended to reach your eyes... Get the facts on
anyone!" said one ad.
These services offer to "Find out secrets about your relatives, friends,
enemies and everyone else!" Perhaps spam e-mailers get paid by the exclamation
point.
Nothing quells anxiety like research. I can't get enough of it. Before buying
my car, I read all I could on the reliability of the Ford Taurus. Before buying
my laptop, I poured over computer magazines. Why wouldn't one put equal effort
where one's safety or at least dignity is at stake?
The problem here is that my computer crashes constantly and my Taurus just when
in for a $600 rehab. It seems that while research is satisfying, there are some
things you just have to test drive.
Back to the Syndicated Column homepage.
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