Yelp updated their Privacy Policy so now businesses can get some insight on their customers. The nice thing is Yelp gives you a preview of how your information would appear to these businesses.
You can Change Privacy Settings to toggle between how much info you want to reveal. As a Yelp user I’m not passive in this. I’m given a choice. I thought this was a pretty cool interaction—a nicely done modal.
Lawrence
on 05 Mar 14I like these interaction examples. Thanks Jamie.
A heads up: when the article has no title, I can only go to article view by clicking on Discuss. When the image is clicked, nothing happens other than the figure element getting a class called zoomed and the image shifting up a bit. Tested on Chrome 33, 35, and Safari 7.0.2.
Michael
on 06 Mar 14Came here to say exactly the same thing as Lawrence.
While you’re at it, please take a look at the blockquote display issues. ;)
David Andersen
on 06 Mar 14Off topic -
Why is the new signalvnoise.com site posting the newest content (the blog) on the right hand side of the screen? Is that not unnatural for what I assume is your predominantly left-to-right reading audience? Why, likewise, is the column width for the greatest hits as large as the new content? This all seems quite incongruent with your typical design-centric approach.
Billy H Sherman
on 07 Mar 14hi! i think it will help you http://www.worksforweb.com/classifieds-software/
Scott Asai
on 07 Mar 14One thing I notice as a business owner is if you contact Yelp about a good review being removed, you’ll get an auto-response, but in both instances for me they put them back!
This discussion is closed.