Culture Why are dating apps absolute trash?

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After the groundbreaking dating app where women can red-flag men who have lied about their status or are abusive was targeted in a devastating data breach, Olivia Petter fears that such well-intentioned platforms may be causing more problems than they solve


Say you meet a man: single, charming, intelligent, all his own teeth sort of thing. Then jitters kick in, and you find yourself wondering if he is as perfect as he seems.

You go through all the usual channels: Google, LinkedIn, Instagram – possibly even ChatGPT – to see what you can find. His digital footprint is clean, but something still seems... a little off.

Maybe it’s the way he speaks so vaguely about his childhood, or makes subtle, persistent digs at an ex-girlfriend that even your tireless investigative work hasn’t been able to find online.

This is where the Tea dating app comes in. Launched in 2023, the US-based platform allows women to share safety information and “spill the tea” about men they are considering dating.

So, in theory, you could meet a man, look him up on the app, and discover that he’s married, has a criminal record, or is a potential catfish. Marketing itself as “the largest women’s group chat in the US”, Tea lets users “review” single men in the hope of ensuring safe dating for heterosexual women everywhere. It’s popular, too, with 1.6 million users to date.

Unfortunately, what seemed like a long-awaited, even vital, tool has been attacked.

Last week, Tea announced that it had been hacked in a suspected misogynistic backlash, exposing around 72,000 images, including the photo identification of its users. Tea later updated users that some of their direct messages (DMs) had also been accessed by hackers. It has since turned off its messaging functionality, and says it will be offering “free identity protection services” to any users it identifies as having been exposed.


I’m not remotely surprised by any of this. Even before the hacking incident, which has sparked discussion around sensitive information being shared online, Tea was seen as controversial and accused of being fundamentally misandrist.

Its intentions were good: founder Sean Cook launched the site after being privy to his mother’s online dating experiences. She was catfished and matched with a man who, unbeknown to her, had a criminal record. Tea was designed to rectify this – and in another world, perhaps it could.

But in the one we live in, I fear that platforms like this may end up causing more problems than they solve.

It’s important to know if someone you’re about to date has a criminal record, isn’t who they say they are, is on a sex offenders’ register, or has a history of abusive behaviour. But beyond those parameters, do single women really need to know about another woman’s – largely subjective – red flags? How is writing off any man because of what his exes have said about him at all helpful? To me, it seems myopic, insulting, and deeply unfair.

Many of us behave badly in relationships. It’s human nature; we mess up, and that’s true of both men and women. I’m sure my exes could rack up a list of terrible things I’ve said and done that, taken out of context, could put off any future suitor. But people change. We learn and grow into ourselves, often becoming different versions of who we are in different relationships.

Apps like Tea don’t allow for that nuance. It’s a binary system where bad reviews leave a permanent stain and add to the pessimism characterising the dating landscape, particularly for straight women. Consider the rising popularity of terms like “heterofatalism” – used to describe the increasing despair among women who feel there are no “good men” left.

Equally troubling is the app’s showcasing of green flags. Just because one man was a great boyfriend to one woman does not guarantee good behaviour with every other female partner. Isn’t the assumption that it does potentially as risky as going out with someone whose reviews are littered with red flags?

In an ideal world, we would all of us – men and women – go on dates with people who’ve been vetted. There would be no risk of being ghosted, stood up, or manipulated. Sure, it would be lovely. But we don’t live in an ideal world, as Tea has neatly reminded us.
 
The problem is using the wrong apps and sites to date in the first place. Here's a curated list of places that would be more effective for my fellow Kiwis to go fishing:

https://wish.org/ - The desperation of some of these people is OFF THE CHARTS. If you claim to know a guy who can procure organs you will be kneedeep in weeping mom pussy.

https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=prison - Lift weights and get your dick sucked at the same time. No homo.

https://www.vatican.va/ - IYKYK

https://gofundme.com/ - Like Wish, but you'll probably have to open your wallet on this one.

https://www.maralagoclub.com/ - They have 14 year old "massage therapists" in the "spa". 5 out of 5 on the Jeffrey scale.
 
Tea app coping aside most dating apps suck because they try to be tinder.
Which tries to be grindr for straights.
It all leads to you endlessly swiping right on either bots,fakes,whores or dopamine addicts.
No conversations,no flirting.
Just swiping til you get desperate and pay up.
And if by chance you manage to start a convo it will be like pulling teeth.
I unironically got more dates with language exchange apps because at least there the Idea is that you gotta talk to people.
 
The very best dating app imaginable would focus on 1) limiting your number of "options" per week/month, and 2) would focus on getting you into a physical room with someone ASAP.

But none of this will happen, because people want choice. So much choice they can't make a decision and FOMO mugs them constantly.
 
All the people who know their own worth and can behave around others is already dating or married. Dating apps are a last resort option for both men and women if they're not outright hooking up, it's why everyone on them is bottom of the barrel. They're all for-profit too, so who the fuck's going to stay a paying customer once they find husband/wife material? If you're a lonely dork, just go join a social club, MMO guild, or just take a class for a hobby. You'll meet people who at least like the shit you do.
 
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