Quantcast
Channel: BuzzFeed - Buzz Tagged Neighbors
Viewing all 108 articles
Browse latest View live

21 Neighbors You Desperately Don't Want To Live Near


The Ultimate Difference Between Your Party And Your Neighbor's Party

24 Things People In NYC Love To Talk About

$
0
0

Between coffees, obviously.

Brunch.

Brunch.

Bottomless mimosas anyone?

Bravo / Via giphy.com

The subway.

The subway.

Oh cool, the L is down again.

giphy.com

Their neighbors.

Their neighbors.

How can two people be so loud and horrible...

Universal Pictures / Via giphy.com

How long you have to live in New York City to count as a New Yorker.

How long you have to live in New York City to count as a New Yorker.

It's five years.*

*That's debatable

alfalfastudio.com


View Entire List ›

13 Reasons Seth Rogen Is Hotter Than Zac Efron

$
0
0

The brain is mightier than the abs. Get a full dose of the Zac vs. Seth feud in Neighbors. Own it Now on Blu-ray™ and DVD.

It's a fact: Zac Efron is one of the hottest studs ever.

It's a fact: Zac Efron is one of the hottest studs ever.

But Seth Rogen is even hotter.

But Seth Rogen is even hotter.

First of all, he's a nature lover. That's super hot.

First of all, he's a nature lover. That's super hot.

For a big-time Hollywood superstar, he's remarkably grounded.

For a big-time Hollywood superstar, he's remarkably grounded.


View Entire List ›

How Much Of A Party Animal Are You?

$
0
0

Partying is serious business. Find out how your party prowess stacks up, and study for your next epic party with Neighbors. Own it Now on Blu-ray™ and DVD.

Study up for your next epic party with Neighbors. Own it on Blu-ray™ and DVD September 23.

When You Finally Meet Someone Like You

What Does Tiki-Tiki Mean?

What Does Pampel Mean?


Racial Profiling Is Still A Problem On Nextdoor

$
0
0

Thousands of people in more than 100,000 US communities use Nextdoor, the app that allows neighbors to chat about everything from yard sales to bike theft, but which has also struggled with a reputation that it’s become a hub for racial profiling.

Last August, Nextdoor proudly announced a solution to this problem: an algorithmic form that prevents people from racially profiling, or making posts about crime and safety that focus on an individual’s race and nothing else. But almost nine months later, Nextdoor still hasn’t patched holes in its anti-racial-profiling system. In fact, until earlier this month, the company hadn’t even started rolling out the feature on mobile. As a result, racial profiling — which has the potential to put real neighbors in danger — continues to be a problem on Nextdoor.

Laurie Bertram Roberts, who lives with her seven kids in a majority-white neighborhood in Jackson, Mississippi, noticed two months ago that one of her neighbors had posted on Nextdoor under the heading “Beware.” The message warned that two black men were going door to door in the neighborhood asking if they could cut grass for money. “May be harmless,” the message poster said. “Just be wary of letting them inside!” An hour after the post went up on Nextdoor, another neighbor who saw the men walking up someone’s driveway called the police.

Nextdoor's racial profiling prevention tools only rolled out in the app on Android phones earlier this month, and they still aren’t in use on iOS.

The incident incensed Roberts, who is black, and she replied to the post. “You just painted every pair of black males in [the neighborhood] as suspects, including my son and his friends who may be on their way to the store minding their business,” she wrote, according to screenshots reviewed by BuzzFeed News. “We have a right to walk around without being deemed suspects because 2 dudes scared you.”

A member of the Jackson Police Department wasn’t able to locate any additional information about this incident, but said going door to door looking for work isn’t a criminal activity.

Nextdoor has been lauded by local officials in Oakland for its efforts to stop racial profiling. It even won an award from the Bay Area chapter of 100 Black Men, a national civic organization for professional black men. “We created the company because we believe in bringing people together,” said CEO Nirav Tolia in a CBS This Morning interview last year. “In terms of racism, it’s one of the most divisive things in our community today. We want to be part of that solution.”

But a BuzzFeed News review of various local Nextdoor groups suggests there’s still a lot of racial profiling on Nextdoor.

For example, here’s a post that a user near St. Louis saw in January.

For example, here’s a post that a user near St. Louis saw in January.

Here’s another one, in the Bay Area in December:

Here’s another one, in the Bay Area in December:

And here’s a third example from Florida, shared on Twitter in February. Nextdoor’s CEO responded to this post, saying in a tweet that the “work in this area will never be done.”

And here’s a third example from Florida, shared on Twitter in February. Nextdoor’s CEO responded to this post, saying in a tweet that the “work in this area will never be done.”

Part of the reason the problem persists is that racism is pervasive and pernicious, and no piece of software is going to stop it. But while Nextdoor’s algorithmic solution certainly forces users to stop and think about the role race plays in their analysis of a suspicious situation, it was deployed with significant weak points that have made it less effective than it originally seemed.

The features Nextdoor built to prevent racial profiling only rolled out in the app on Android phones earlier this month, and they still aren’t in use on iOS. (The company said it plans to roll out the algorithm on iOS on May 24.) And people can still post whatever they want in comments and Urgent Alerts, which are short, time-sensitive messages distributed immediately by text message or email to the whole neighborhood.

In an email statement to BuzzFeed News, a Nextdoor spokesperson said all the instances of racial profiling cited here either were “not alerted” to Nextdoor or were flagged by a neighbor and “handled appropriately by our support team,” which may or may not involve removing a post. The spokesperson said the company does not comment on individual members or posts.

One user said her Oakland neighborhood Nextdoor group still sees at least one instance of racial profiling a month.

Nextdoor said the “vast majority of the instances of racial profiling have been eliminated due to the actions we have taken.” A company spokesperson declined to explain the rationale for or methodology behind that conclusion. Nextdoor also declined to share what percentage of content posted to its site comes through mobile apps.

Nextdoor acknowledged back in November that racial profiling was still possible in Crime & Safety posts on mobile apps, and in urgent alerts and replies, but more than six months later, the company is still searching for a way to prevent it. “With the support of our partners, community groups, and experts in the field, we will continue to address this issue and specific instances as they come up,” Nextdoor’s statement pledges.

Individual users aren’t the only ones who have noticed that racial profiling persists on Nextdoor. Shikira Porter is a representative for Neighbors for Racial Justice, one of two community groups that’s been working with the company to address racism on its platform. (Nextdoor also brought on Debo Adegbile, formerly of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and Grande Lum of the Divided Community Project as national advisers.)

Porter said she presented Nextdoor with a 15-page document of ongoing problems and possible solutions during a conference call in November, but the company took until January to make any changes. “They tweaked one thing out of all the things we listed were problematic,” she said. The result is that Nextdoor’s system still has “all of these major holes.”

Porter said her Oakland neighborhood Nextdoor group still sees at least one instance of racial profiling a month.

But even when Nextdoor fully deploys its racism-fighting algorithm in its app, there will always be some racial profiling the system won’t catch. To make a judgment call in those instances, Nextdoor relies on local neighborhood leads — frequent users who are nominated by their neighbors to be group moderators. Porter said Neighbors for Racial Justice stressed to Nextdoor the importance of “mandatory and comprehensive Leads training” on the definition and risks of racial profiling.

In August, during a meeting at Nextdoor’s headquarters, a spokesperson said the company was thinking about ways to scale up the racial profiling and unconscious bias trainings it had done internally to all of its national neighborhood leads. Asked for details on the program, Nextdoor’s spokesperson said some neighborhood leads in Oakland had received bias training, a program the company is working to put online “to provide to our Leads across the country.”

One of the problems with putting volunteers in charge of policing racial profiling on Nextdoor, says Jackson resident Tom Head, is that not all neighbors agree with Nextdoor’s stance on racial profiling. For example, when one of Head’s neighbors recently posted an urgent alert saying a black man was sitting in a parked car in a driveway, the neighborhood lead responded to the post by clicking "Thank," which is the Nextdoor equivalent of Facebook’s "like."

“I stay on [Nextdoor] because I really do fear the day someone sends an alert and it's my kids they're describing as suspicious.”

"I haven't actually seen a lead post a message where they said, 'I will not enforce the racial profiling guidelines,' but I have certainly seen leads participate in threads where [the guidelines] were being ridiculed,” said Head. "In majority-white communities in Mississippi, the idea of opposing racial profiling as a matter of policy is not necessarily a popular one."

Head added that even if a lead is personally against racial profiling, “enforcing these policies against their neighbors, coworkers, employers, and clients” can have unwanted social and financial consequences. "If you look at the people who signed up early and did the most invites and ended up as leads, it incentivizes, for example, realtors," he said. "If you're a realtor, and you're selling houses in a neighborhood, you have to maintain relationships with some of the people who might be posting these objectionable posts. It can become financially risky to offend these people by taking socially unpopular positions.”

A solution to this problem, Head suggested, would be to have Nextdoor employees intervene when a lead declines to take action when another neighbor reports a post for racial profiling. The good thing about leads being local community members, Head said, is that “they’re usually willing to do it for free.” But, he continued, it also “creates a problem in that, if you have a national policy that a local neighborhood doesn’t like, it’s very hard for the lead to enforce it.”

In August, Nextdoor said all posts flagged for racial profiling would be directly reported to a team of two dozen trained customer support staffers. But Head said that when he reported the urgent alert about the man sitting in a car to Nextdoor’s support team, "nothing came of it."

“It’s the people who are using the platform that I’m most frustrated about,” said Rebekah Goode-Peoples, a former Nextdoor user in Atlanta. “My greatest disappointment was realizing how bigoted many of my neighbors were.” Goode-Peoples deleted her Nextdoor account in September of last year, after reporting an incident in which a black female delivery worker was blamed for her own mugging because she willingly delivered food to a black neighborhood and didn’t bring a gun. Goode-Peoples never heard back from Nextdoor about her complaint.

"We remain completely committed to eliminating racial profiling on Nextdoor," a company spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.

Laurie Bertram Roberts — the mom in Jackson — said the Nextdoor post about two black men going door to door looking for work was eventually taken down, after a few people shared a screenshot on Facebook. (However, sharing Nextdoor content on other social media is against Nextdoor’s rules, because the posts are linked to people’s real names and locations.)

“I only became active on Nextdoor again after the new rules because I thought it would be better,” she said over Twitter DM. “I stay on because I really do fear the day someone sends an alert and it's my kids they're describing as suspicious.”

Zac Efron Is Turning 30, So Here Are His 30 Most Adorable Moments

$
0
0

Earth has officially been a better place for 30 years.

When he gave off the ~dad vibes~ in 17 Again...

When he gave off the ~dad vibes~ in 17 Again...

New Line Cinema / Via media.giphy.com

...and could barely see at the premiere.

...and could barely see at the premiere.

Some perspective: Matthew Perry was 30 during the 6th season of Friends.

Jason Merritt / Getty Images / Via gettyimages.com

The first time he stole our hearts as Troy Bolton.

The first time he stole our hearts as Troy Bolton.

He sang, played basketball, and practically invented the messy side fringe. Our gentle souls never stood a chance.

Disney-ABC Domestic Television / Via media.giphy.com

His kiss with Ashley Tisdale on The Suite Life of Zack and Cody.

His kiss with Ashley Tisdale on The Suite Life of Zack and Cody.

You're welcome, Troypay shippers.

Disney–ABC Television Group / Via pinterest.com

This.

Instagram: @zacefron / Via instagram.com

When he showed his emotions in Charlie St. Cloud.

When he showed his emotions in Charlie St. Cloud.

Who hurt you, Zac?!

Universal Pictures / Via media.giphy.com

This throwback post...

We can only assume Leo was giving him "heartthrob lessons."

Instagram: @zacefron / Via instagram.com

Hanging out with this iconic duo at the High School Musical 2 premiere.

Hanging out with this iconic duo at the High School Musical 2 premiere.

These three should collaborate more, tbh.

Charley Gallay / Getty Images / Via gettyimages.com

His early days of winning Teen Choice Awards.

His early days of winning Teen Choice Awards.

He has since won 11. GIVE HIM MORE, YOUNG PEOPLE!

Frazer Harrison / Getty Images / Via gettyimages.com

This family photo.

Look at that sly face. He ~knows~ he's going to be adorable forever.

instagram.com / Via instagram.com

The Link wink.

The Link wink.

Boy oh boy, was he the nicest kid in town.

New Line Cinema / Via media.giphy.com

That iconic incident where he dropped a condom on the red carpet.

That iconic incident where he dropped a condom on the red carpet.

Don't be embarrassed, Zac. We've all done it.

buzzfeed.com

His reluctant friendship with a monkey in a windbreaker.

His reluctant friendship with a monkey in a windbreaker.

NBC News Productions / Via buzzfeed.com

That time he re-created an old look.

That time he re-created an old look.

NBCUniversal Television Distribution / Via media.giphy.com

The Baywatch tumble.

Let's be honest... He looks good in any position.

Instagram: @zacefron / Via instagram.com

When we realized, years later, that he played Young Simon on Firefly.

When we realized, years later, that he played Young Simon on Firefly.

Look at this handsome fellow in his television debut.

20th Century Fox Television / Via i.imgur.com

When he dressed in drag with Jimmy and Seth.

That leg pose, though.

Instagram: @zacefron / Via instagram.com

When he won the coveted "Best Shirtless Performance" MTV Movie Award.

When he won the coveted "Best Shirtless Performance" MTV Movie Award.

Sexy is the new adorable.

MTV / Via media.giphy.com

This stripper pole challenge on The Graham Norton Show.

This stripper pole challenge on The Graham Norton Show.

BBC / Via i.ytimg.com

When he made "The Macarena" tolerable again...

When he made "The Macarena" tolerable again...

Lionsgate / Via media.giphy.com

...and made us rethink the science behind boiling water.

...and made us rethink the science behind boiling water.

Teddy Sanders is peak Efron.

Universal Pictures / Via youtube.com

When he surprised Simone Biles.

She is all of us.

Instagram: @zacefron / Via instagram.com

This poster.

This poster.

Focus Features / Via pinterest.com

Speaking of awkward moments, remember these three at the MTV Movie Awards in 2009?

Speaking of awkward moments, remember these three at the MTV Movie Awards in 2009?

Still adorable, though.

Kevin Winter / Getty Images / Via gettyimages.com

When he failed Tinder.

When he failed Tinder.

Tinder / Via nowomaha.com

Look at him being a good sport.

Look at him being a good sport.

ZAC HAS THE FACE OF AN ANGEL, MATT!!!

Disney–ABC Domestic Television / Via img.wennermedia.com

When he gave Ellen a lap dance... IN LEATHER PANTS.

When he gave Ellen a lap dance... IN LEATHER PANTS.

LEATHER PANTS.

Warner Bros. Television / Via wordpress.com

That time he played a wise stoner in Liberal Arts.

That time he played a wise stoner in Liberal Arts.

Fortune never smiles on those who don't love The Efron.

IFC Films / Via media.giphy.com

When Teddy went into gay wedding planning.

When Teddy went into gay wedding planning.

"He looks like something a gay guy designed in a laboratory."

Universal Pictures / Via youtube.com

And his recent "cool" encounter with a bear.

And his recent "cool" encounter with a bear.

P.S. Dylan Efron is adorable, too.

Columbia Sports Wear / Via wordpress.com

Happy Birthday, Zac! You are a human treasure.

Happy Birthday, Zac! You are a human treasure.

Universal Pictures / Via media.giphy.com

What's The Weirdest Thing You've Seen Through Your Neighbor's Window?

$
0
0

“Old Man Jensen from next door was doing WHAT?!?!”

Have you ever been home, minding your own damn business, when you couldn't help but notice something strange happening through your neighbor's window?

Have you ever been home, minding your own damn business, when you couldn't help but notice something strange happening through your neighbor's window?

Willie Jones / Via giphy.com

...And while you didn't want to watch, you just couldn't look away?

...And while you didn't want to watch, you just couldn't look away?

Eagle-Lion Films / Via giphy.com

Maybe they were doing some avant-garde sex thing.

Maybe they were doing some avant-garde sex thing.

NBC / Via giphy.com

Or perhaps grooming their pet with one of these...?

Or perhaps grooming their pet with one of these...?

Lickibrush.com / Via nerdist.com

IDK, but whatever it was, it's something you still can't seem to shake from your memory.

IDK, but whatever it was, it's something you still can't seem to shake from your memory.

YouTube / Via giphy.com

So tell us what you've seen your ~fweaky~ neighbors do!

So tell us what you've seen your ~fweaky~ neighbors do!

Universal Pictures / Via giphy.com

The crazier, the better!!!

The crazier, the better!!!

VH1 / Via giphy.com

Hey, Did You Guys Move?

Which Zac Efron Character Is Your Soulmate Based On These 11 Questions?

20 Things That'll Make You A Better Neighbor

Êtes-vous un voisin de merde ?


19 People Who Were So Angry They Wrote A Strongly-Worded Note

The Ultimate Difference Between Your Party And Your Neighbor's Party

Racial Profiling Is Still A Problem On Nextdoor

$
0
0

Nine months after the social network for neighbors announced an algorithmic fix for racial profiling and doubled down on its commitment to fighting it, the site still has a problem with posts that unfairly target people of color.


View Entire Post ›

Go Wild In Vegas And We'll Give You A Party Movie To Watch

18 Nextdoor Posts That Are Truly Something Else

Viewing all 108 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>