Dating

New Book Explores Algorithms and Sexual Racism in Online Dating

Dating
  • Wednesday, April 10 2024 @ 08:18 am
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Apryl Williams, Harvard sociologist and researcher who studies race, gender, and popular culture, has written a new book entitled Not My Type: Automating Sexual Racism in Online Dating.

According to Harvard News, the book is a blend of technical analysis, user interviews, and an “historical look at racism and romance in America,” and is a result of ten years of research.

Williams argues that algorithms in dating apps curate matches based on ranking attractiveness that is “racially informed.” In other words, algorithms match users with others who look like them, reinforcing racial stereotypes and feeding into the idea that certain groups are more attractive and appealing than others.

Grindr Looking to Monetize App, Including with AI Chatbots

Dating
  • Tuesday, April 09 2024 @ 09:59 am
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Grindr and AI Boyfriends
 

Grindr’s CEO George Arrison is planning to monetize the app more aggressively, including launching an AI chatbot and putting previously free features behind a paywall.

News website Platformer broke the news about Grindr’s plans to launch an AI-based “boyfriend” chatbot feature that can engage in sexually explicit conversations with users, for a price. Some employees have expressed weariness, as the AI-generated conversations could be based in part on private chats between other human users, pending their consent.

Platformer also learned that Grindr is revising its terms of service to ask people signing up if the company can train their AI models on their personal data, which can include direct messages. This is likely to be a privacy issue going forward for other dating apps who could pursue employing user data to train AI.

BLK Launches College-Focused Feature in Time for Spring Break

Dating
  • Wednesday, April 03 2024 @ 10:02 am
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Spring Break

BLK dating app has unveiled Spring Mode to help foster more connection among college students during their spring break vacations, when many are traveling and looking to meet people.

According to Blavity, the feature allows college students to place a fun badge on their profiles of the place they plan to visit over their spring break, in case other potential matches might be traveling there, too. Destinations include Hawaii, Cancun, Jamaica, Los Angeles, Cabo, the Dominican Republic, Cancun, Las Vegas, and Miami among other prime locations.

The badges all have unique personality and style, and are modeled after the famous places they represent. The vision behind Spring Mode according to Jonathan Kirkland, BLK’s head of marketing and brand, is in line with the company’s overall commitment to fostering connection and community as well as inclusivity.

Study Shows Singles Turning to LinkedIn to Date

Dating
  • Tuesday, April 02 2024 @ 08:13 am
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LinkedIn is having a moment with romance. In a recent study, more than half of singles are turning to the career networking platform to find dates.

According to Dating News, a majority of 61 percent of singles aged 35 to 40 found dates on LinkedIn. Overall, 52 percent of all respondents ages 20 to 40 have found their dates on the business networking platform, highlighting its unexpected new role.

Interestingly, the second-best way that people say they are finding dates (48 percent) is through being set up on blind dates. Only 45 percent of respondents reported finding luck on online dating sites in comparison.

Older daters are more apt to have successfully met people via dating sites – half of respondents between 35 and 40 years old said they have met people on dating sites compared to only 33 percent of people between 20 and 24 years old, according to Dating News. Gen Z appears more open to meeting people outside of dating sites than Millennials, who came of age when dating apps launched and tend to gravitate to those platforms.

Despite Being Scammed Users Return to Dating Apps

Dating
  • Monday, March 18 2024 @ 11:42 am
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A new report on dating app security found that a majority of 70 percent of dating app users had been scammed on one of the dating platforms.

According to Newsweek, the study surveyed people who had used dating apps over the past three years, and 93 percent said they would go back to using the apps, even those who said they were scammed or had their information stolen.

When users sign up for these platforms, their personal information, even social security numbers, become vulnerable to scammers. Sixty-nine percent of those surveyed said they were asked to verify their identity on a dating app and 65 percent said they’d provided their social security numbers.

Grindr CEO is Hopeful About Restructuring App to Add Travel Features and Go Beyond Hookups

Dating
  • Friday, March 15 2024 @ 02:29 pm
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Grindr CEO George Arison is hoping to turn things around for the popular gay dating app after a tumultuous year with employees, investors and app users alike. He is focusing on moving Grindr beyond a hookup app, and in streamlining costs.

According to a feature in The Financial Times, an “a la carte” payment option for travel services will be added to boost the company’s revenue. Arison noted that travelling to events such as Aspen Gay Ski Week and New Year’s Eve in Rio de Janeiro is hugely popular among Grindr users, and the company sees advantages to offering those attending a way to connect.

Grindr is currently testing a feature called Teleport, which lets users place their profile in a new location for an hour to connect with others before traveling to that place. Tinder has a similar feature called Passport, where users can mark their location at a place where they are traveling.

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