Tag: Tinder

  • Zayn Malik faces Tinder bans again and again – here’s why

    Zayn Malik faces Tinder bans again and again – here’s why

    Zayn Malik recently opened up about his music, his upcoming album ‘Room Under the Stairs,’ and his past relationships. The former One Direction superstar also shared his struggles with Tinder, the popular dating app.

    In an interview with NYLON, Zayn revealed that his attempts to use Tinder were unsuccessful. He was repeatedly removed from the app because people thought he was catfishing. “Everyone accused me of catfishing,” Zayn said. “They’re like, ‘What are you using Zayn Malik’s pictures for?’” the Dusk Till Dawn hitmaker said.

    “It’s not been too successful for me, I’ll be honest,” he added.

    Zayn also talked about his engagement to Perrie Edwards, which lasted from when he was 17 to age 21. He admitted, “I didn’t know anything about anything at that point. I was legally allowed to do everything, but I didn’t know [expletive]”

  • Tinder now has ‘arranged dating’ feature

    Tinder now has ‘arranged dating’ feature

    Every singleton dreads this question from their parents: “Are you currently dating anyone?” However, thanks to Tinder’s new feature, those days of avoiding this inquiry might be a thing of the past.  

    Tinder has introduced a feature called “Tinder Matchmaker,” which enables users’ friends and family to view and recommend potential matches for them. This feature might have spared Robert De Niro’s character a great deal of turmoil in the film “Meet the Parents,” where he clashed with his potential son-in-law, played by Ben Stiller.

    Tinder Matchmaker is currently available in the UK, US, Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Spain, Thailand, and Vietnam. It will gradually expand to other countries.  

    This feature builds on the common practice of users seeking their friends’ opinions by handing them their phones. According to Melissa Hobley, the chief marketing officer, “For years, singles have asked their friends to help find their next match on Tinder, and now we’re making that so easy with Tinder Matchmaker. It brings your circle of trust into your dating journey, helping you see potential matches you might be overlooking from the perspective of those closest to you.”  

    Tinder, which initially launched in September 2012, has significantly transformed the online dating landscape. In September, it introduced a $500 invite-only membership tier called Tinder Select, catering to “elite” users, offered to less than 1 per cent of users.   

    Additionally, in August, the company announced testing an artificial intelligence tool designed to select a user’s best-looking photos for their profiles, with the hope of increasing the likelihood of getting swiped right. This tool will analyse a user’s photo album and choose the five images that best represent them. 

  • Man uses Tinder to find sisters to ‘hangout during Raksha Bandhan’

    Man uses Tinder to find sisters to ‘hangout during Raksha Bandhan’

    A Mumbai man updated his Tinder bio two weeks ago to add, “Looking for a sister to hang out during Rakshabandhan.”

    This sounds odd as one of the most widely used dating apps, Tinder, is exclusively used to find partners rather than sisters.

    The man wrote on Reddit that he used the app to find sisters because he didn’t have any. He wrote about how Raksha Bandhan, a holy festival for the Hindu community, made him feel lonely because he didn’t have anyone to tie him a Rakhi.

    He has been using Tinder for the past two years to find “a sister to hang out with during Raksha Bandhan,” and this year he was successful in finding two girls. The three of them are now getting ready to celebrate the day together.

    He wrote, “I have felt the FOMO for most of my life during Raksha Bandhan as I do not have any sister. No one to tie me Rakhi and me gifting them stuff. Anyways, since last 2 years I have been putting the bio as follows during 2 weeks before Raksha Bandhan: Looking for a sister to hangout during Raksha Bandhan. Thanks to Tinder, now I have like two sisters both of whom I met on Tinder. This year all 3 of us are planning to get together and celebrate Raksha Bandhan and exchange gifts and stuff. I’m so excited.”

    With more than 120 comments as of now, the Reddit post has 97 per cent upvotes.

    Another Reddit user expressed her willingness to tie him a Rakhi and take on the role of her Reddit sister because her brother is away and Raksha Bandhan makes her feel lonely.

  • Brands get cheeky after Weetabix proposes breakfast with baked beans

    Weetabix has stirred up a storm after it suggested people to have the cereal with baked beans for breakfast.

    “Why should bread have all the fun when there’s Weetabix?,” said Weetabix in the caption. “Serving up Heinz Beanz on bix for breakfast with a twist.”

    Responding to the tweet, several brands including Tinder, Papa Johns, KitKat, KFC and Nandos left some cheeky replies.

    Tinder UK thinks this is not what you call ‘a match’.

    The US Embassy tweeted that the pairing was “not the [US-UK] collaboration we were hoping for”.

  • Online dating still a taboo in Pakistan

    Online dating still a taboo in Pakistan

    After endlessly swiping through pictureless profiles on dating apps, Muhammad Ali Shah still hasn’t found the one — or really anyone — to get serious with.

    In Pakistan, where arranged marriages are the norm, he says many women choose to stay anonymous, making online dating matches tricky.

    “It’s slim pickings,” sighs the 36-year-old entrepreneur living in Islamabad, saying friends have called him “desperate” and a “man whore” after going on dozens of dates over the past three years to little avail.

    Unlike in many countries where meeting online is routine, Pakistanis who use dating apps regularly face harassment and judgmental relatives — and now also have to contend with a government clampdown.

    Women users in particular fear possible retribution and often reveal little about themselves — using cartoons, avatars, or random pictures of nature instead of a profile photo.

    “Girls aren’t comfortable… so they don’t really put their pictures or their real names. So it’s a guessing game,” explains Shah.

    The self-described conversationalist relies instead on humorous icebreakers with new matches to kick-start chats, and only asks for a picture if the potential date is comfortable and possibly up for meeting.

    “Most of the time I’m just left swiping because there aren’t any pictures. There’s no real information. The names are not there,” adds Shah. “I don’t blame women for being so careful. I actually think it’s very smart.”

    A 27-year-old woman from Islamabad who was brave enough to post real photos and her name said it was “kind of taboo to be on Tinder”.

    “I was getting phone calls from friends saying ‘I can’t believe you’re on Tinder’,” she said, asking not to be named, adding that she connected with both women and men.

    But she eventually deleted the app once business clients started trying to interact with her on it.

    She says some of her friends who were willing to take the risk have found varying levels of success, but only after going on carefully planned dates.

    “What we do when a friend of ours is going on a Tinder date, we normally just hang out at the same place,” she adds. “We make it sort of safe.”

    If finding love online was already difficult, authorities last month banned Tinder, Grindr and other popular apps for failing to “moderate” their content.

    The move dealt a fresh blow to what is already a niche scene in the country of 220 million people, where most online daters come from the middle and upper classes in Pakistan’s urban areas.

    For the more traditionally inclined, life without dating apps will serve as a return to normality.

    “Dating is not part of our culture or religion. Things need to be done in a halal way — especially something as important as finding a life partner,” explains a 50-year-old matchmaker based in Karachi who has been helping families find suitable partners for arranged marriages for over a decade.

    “Banning these dating apps is a way to preserve our traditions.”

    But despite the potential pitfalls, some say finding love online is possible and a way to avoid arranged marriages.

    “I’d simply had it with the whole culture of arranged marriage in Pakistan, where I’m paraded around in front of mothers, sisters and matchmakers as they pick on my flaws and remind me how I’m not worthy of their son,” says a 23-year-old medical student living in Lahore who met her husband on Tinder and asked not to be named.

    “It took a while until I found someone I could trust, respect, and rely on,” she adds. “But I found him on my own terms, and that’s what makes it special too.”

  • Pakistanis are outraged with PTA for blocking Tinder

    Pakistanis are outraged with PTA for blocking Tinder

    On Tuesday, the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) blocked access to Tinder and several other dating apps in a bid to control “immoral” and “indecent” content.

    In a statement, PTA said it barred users from accessing Tinder, Grindr, SayHi, Tagged and Skout after the social networking apps failed to “moderate… content in accordance” with Pakistan’s laws.

    The PTA said the ban addressed the “negative effects of immoral/indecent content”, adding that the apps could request to have their blocks lifted if they show they are “moderating the indecent/immoral content through meaningful engagement”. However, the regulator did not specify what it meant by that engagement.

    Meanwhile, Tinder, in a statement, said it would “welcome the opportunity to discuss our product and moderation efforts with PTA and look forward to a meaningful conversation.”

    Following the announcement, enraged Pakistanis took to social media to express their anger at PTA for blocking the apps.

    https://twitter.com/hiraq36/status/1300805674495025155?s=20

    https://twitter.com/gigglypundit/status/1300800999594979328?s=20

    Other Twitter users including Osman Khalid Butt decided to make a joke of the situation.

    Earlier, PTA asked YouTube to immediately block all videos they consider “objectionable” from being accessed in the country. The demand was criticised by rights campaigners who fear creeping censorship and control of Pakistan’s internet and printed media.

    In July, authorities issued a final warning to Chinese-owned social media app TikTok, ordering it to filter any obscene content, following which TikTok not only upgraded its ‘Community Guidelines’, but also released its Urdu language version for Pakistani users.