ÜberFacts explained

ÜberFacts
Commercial:Yes
Type:Online database for facts
Language:English
Owner:Kris & Renee Sanchez
Author:Kris Sanchez
Current Status:Active

ÜberFacts is an online web service/app that provides people with random facts. There is currently a Twitter version, a mobile app version, Instagram version, and a Facebook version. The service was developed by Kris Sanchez. Sanchez receives the facts through research from books, science articles, the news, and more.[1] He stated that he always confirms the accuracy of the facts prior to releasing them. Mistakes are eventually deleted or updated with corrections.[2]

History

ÜberFacts creator Kris Sanchez reported searching for interesting facts during a boring day in September 2009. This prompted Kris to create a Twitter account with a "purpose" and created the ÜberFacts Twitter account.[1]

Twitter hacked

On May 21, 2014, the UberFacts Twitter account was hacked, the hacker sent vulgar messages out. Sanchez noticed this and tweeted on his personal account that the hacker will have to pay him for every tweet the hacker owes him. On the next day, Sanchez recovered UberFacts, and announced that his account was hacked and felt sorry if anyone got offended by the vulgar messages the hacker sent out.[3] [4]

Reception

A March 2014 BuzzFeed article panned UberFacts for its occasionally incorrect facts, justifying why they are occasionally inaccurate. BuzzFeed then sent an email to Sanchez inquiring if the facts provided are incorrect, he responded saying that the accuracy of his facts are reviewed prior to releasing them and he does not cite sources because not everyone would want to see a link at the end of a tweet.[5]

Sanchez stated that he earns approximately US$500,000 per year through Uberfacts, and expects that number to increase in the future due to the release of a dedicated app.[1] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The man behind the latest Twitter meme: Uberfacts - ZDNet. Andrew. Mager. . 15 July 2016.
  2. Web site: The Truth About UberFacts: They're Often Wrong. . 15 July 2016.
  3. Web site: Popular 'UberFacts' Twitter May Have Been Stolen — And The Hacker Is Taunting The Account Owner. . 15 July 2016.
  4. Web site: Here are the Worst Tweets From the UberFacts Twitter Hack Last Night. . 15 July 2016.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20150824045535/https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/615696617165885440/JDbUuo9H.jpg pbs.twimg.com
  6. Web site: How a 23-year-old makes $500,000 a year tweeting random facts. Madeline. Stone. Business Insider Australia.
  7. Web site: UberFacts Isn't Steaming Hot Garbage Anymore. Matt. Novak. Gawker Media. Factually. 7 April 2015 .
  8. Web site: UberFacts.
  9. Web site: How To Make $500,000 A Year On Twitter. Fast Company.
  10. Web site: UberFacts Launches on iPhone. Sawers. Paul. 22 April 2014. The Next Web.