Decision making website app / site with hidden preferences

Post date: 2021-09-18 08:13:44
Views: 189
When 2 or more people are faced with an unimportant or fun decision, I would love a thing where we can each enter in our preference for it, hidden from the other, and the oracle on the computer end tells us what to do based on the averaged preferences. Example: "Should we go to that party tonight?", on a scale of 1-5, X enters 2, the app hides their entry, X hands the phone to Y, Y says 1, gives it to Z, who says 4, but since the average was under 3, the computer says no without explicitly revealing the numbers or who entered them, and we're free. I feel this must exist but I'm having trouble finding one. Can be an app, site, a way to do this with a piece of paper, whatever. Any ideas?

(I assume we'd have to set the default action for a equally divided result beforehand, and of course in my example Z would know X or Y were more no than them, but they wouldn't know precisely which or how much. I'm not planning to use this for anything too important or personal where privacy is a big risk.)
Number of Comments
Please click Here to read the full story.
 
Other Top and Latest Questions:
Here are the 3 big things we're watching in the stock market in the week ahead
CNBC Points Pro: How soon should I use my credit card points after earning them?
Elon Musk seeks ouster of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman as part of lawsuit
USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins sent Easter email to staff touting 'Jesus' and 'God'
FedEx trucking spinoff targets 2026 operating margin of 12%
Countries around the world are considering teen social media bans – why experts warn it’s a ‘lazy’ fix
CEO shares a 'very dangerous' red flag in a boss—it makes employees feel like they 'signed up for a false promise'
First ships pass Strait of Hormuz since Trump-Iran ceasefire, but traffic remains low amid confusion
Oil prices plunge after Iran agrees to safe passage through Strait of Hormuz during ceasefire
Robinhood’s Trump Accounts partnership signals big upside for the stock, analysts say