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Every time I tell people that, despite being single, I’ve never been on a dating app, they tend to assume I’m lying. Or worse ...
Approaching a potential partner IRL means taking a risk. Do we have the skills to go beyond swiping left or right anymore?
*Popular dating apps like Tinder, Bumble, and Hinge are seeing major drops in user numbers. A 2024 Ofcom report showed a 16% decline in UK users across these platforms. Tinder alone lost nearly ...
“Of all the things I’ve heard people say they’re doing to try to meet people more organically,” says Liesel Sharabi, an ...
Kasia Kovacs and her friends are in their 30s and have become exhausted with online dating apps. Ghosting, dead-end messaging, and red-flag matches have left them with much to be desired.
Despite dating apps and social media advice, romantic connections can be hard to make. Enter artificial intelligence.
The problem these apps are trying to solve, in other words — with an emphasis on “real life,” AI dating coaches, and a broadening of scope into friendship — is themselves.
In 2022, 3 in 10 U.S. adults said they had used a dating site or app, with some 9 percent reporting having used one in the past year, according to surveys conducted by the Pew Research Center.
New research suggests teens are using dating apps more than parents realize. Here’s why parents should talk to their kids about the risks of online dating platforms.
There's long been a theory that, on dating apps, 80% of women are pursuing the top 20% of men — but new research reveals it's actually fellas who are aiming too high when swiping for love.
In doing that, the dating apps are telling you what you should be prioritizing.” Knowing what you like in a potential partner is important, she said.
Nearly one in four teenagers are using dating apps—and it may not be hurting their mental health, suggests a new Northwestern Medicine study that monitored adolescents over six months.