Dating

Dating Apps Try and Entice Young Women to Return

Dating
  • Tuesday, June 18 2024 @ 12:32 pm
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Dating apps are struggling right now, and many Gen Z women are looking to other platforms like LinkedIn and Instagram to meet people.

A new article in The Financial Times cites a poll from Mintel that found that 47 percent of men between 18 and 34 had used a dating app or website to meet someone this past year, compared to only 25 percent of women of the same age.

“Trying to engage young women is the biggest struggle for dating apps,” said Rebecca McGrath, associate director for media and technology at Mintel. “Significant gender skew means it is harder for men to find matches and, subsequently, women often become bombarded, making the experience worse for all.”

Almost 80 Percent of Gen Z and Millennials Report Dating App Fatigue

Dating
  • Friday, June 14 2024 @ 02:22 pm
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Gen Z Dating App Fatigue

A new survey from Forbes Health has revealed that a whopping 80 percent of Gen Z and Millennial respondents said they are burned out from dating apps.

Forbes surveyed 1,000 singles over eighteen years old who had used a dating app in the past year and found that 40 percent of people feel burned out because they have been unable to find a good connection with someone on an app. Meanwhile, 35 percent say it’s due to being disappointed by people, and 27 percent say it’s because they have been rejected.

Interestingly, twenty-four percent say they feel burned out because of having repetitive conversations with many matches at once, 22 percent say it’s due to swiping, and 21 percent say it’s from all the time they spend on the apps, according to Forbes.

New Tinder Study Shows Men and Women Don’t Understand What Each Other Wants from Dating Apps

Dating
  • Thursday, June 06 2024 @ 02:17 pm
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Tinder Green Flag Study Results
Image: Tinder

A new study by dating app Tinder shows that women and men have major misconceptions about what each other wants from dating apps.

According to USA Today, Tinder’s “Green Flags Study” polled 8,000 heterosexual men and women between 18-34 years old across the U.S., United Kingdom, Canada and Australia to see what people think of the opposite sex when it comes to using dating apps. Researchers pointed out that both men and women who identify as straight were quick to make assumptions about what others actually want out of Tinder, and turned out to often be wrong.

More than half of male (53 percent) and female (68 percent) respondents said they are seeking a romantic relationship.

Hinge Wants to Ban Ghosting with Its Newest Feature

Dating
  • Friday, May 31 2024 @ 07:12 pm
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Dating app Hinge is doubling down on efforts to curb ghosting on its app with a new feature called Your Turn Limits.

According to the company’s press release, Your Turn Limits encourages a user with eight or more matches left waiting for a response to their messages to either reply or end the conversation before that user can match with someone new.

“With the launch of Your Turn Limits, we’re testing a new way to help our users focus on quality over quantity – keeping intentionality at the core of their dating experience,” said Justin McLeod, Founder and CEO of Hinge, in a statement. “We’ve heard from daters how they’re feeling overwhelmed, distracted, and, simply put, burnt out.”

Ex Bumble CEO Weighs in on AI Being the Future of Dating

Dating
  • Monday, May 27 2024 @ 11:56 am
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Founder and former CEO of Bumble Whitney Wolfe Herd told audiences at the Bloomberg Technology Summit that dating apps should lean heavily into AI, including chatbots that can advise users and even go on dates for them.

Herd, who stepped down last year, noted that Bumble will use AI "to help create more healthy and equitable" dating experience, according to Gizmodo.

“You could, in the near future, be talking to your AI dating concierge. You could share your insecurities,” Wolfe Herd said on stage at the Summit, according to Gizmodo. “There is a world where your dating concierge could go and date for you with other dating concierges.”

FBI Issues New Scam Warning for Dating App Users

Dating
  • Wednesday, May 15 2024 @ 04:12 pm
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FBI Warning about Scams on Dating Apps

The FBI has issued a new warning for dating app users about a scam that involves “verification,” which raises more problems for the platforms as they roll out new safety features.

Scammers have been targeting people signing up for dating apps by asking people they match with to verify their identity “for safety reasons.” They share links to websites to get them off the platform, where they can steal the victim’s money and private data, such as credit card information.

The fake website looks real to users, displaying “fake articles alluding to the legitimacy of the website,” according to the FBI’s announcement. The verification website prompts the victim to provide their name, phone number, email address, and credit card number to “complete the process.” When the victim submits the information, they are led to another dating website charging monthly subscription fees.

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