City
Epaper

Most dating apps may share or sell your personal data for advertising: Report

By IANS | Updated: April 23, 2024 17:30 IST

San Francisco, April 23 Most dating apps (80 per cent) might share or sell your personal data for ...

Open in App

San Francisco, April 23 Most dating apps (80 per cent) might share or sell your personal data for advertising, a new report revealed on Tuesday.

The developer of the Firefox Internet browser Mozilla examined 25 apps and labelled 22 of them as ‘Privacy Not Included’ -- the lowest rating in its parlance.

The researcher only gave positive feedback to queer-owned and run Lex, while Harmony and Happn received adequate ratings.

"Dating apps claim the more personal data you share the more likely you are to find love. We have no way of knowing if that’s true. What we do know is that most dating apps fail spectacularly at protecting that information," said Researcher Misha Rykov.

According to the report, about 25 per cent of the apps collect metadata from your content -- which is information in the files about when the photo (or video) was taken, where, and what day. In addition, the report mentioned most dating apps, such as Hinge, Tinder, OKCupid, Match, Plenty of Fish, BLK, and BlackPeopleMeet, have access to precise geo-location data from their users.

Some apps, like Hinge, even collect location information in the background when the app is not actively being used.

For all dating apps, the researchers shared their top three privacy tips -- treat your dating profile more like your LinkedIn profile, don’t log in with a third-party account, and limit app permissions where possible.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalHaji Mastan's daughter alleges years of sexual abuse, seeks PM's intervention

TechnologyIndian stock market opens lower, IT stocks lead losses

BusinessIndian stock market opens lower, IT stocks lead losses

NationalGrateful nation can never forget Chaudhary Charan Singh's contribution to nation-building: PM Modi

BusinessIndian markets open marginally higher, slip into red as Santa rally remains elusive

Business Realted Stories

BusinessIndian economy poised to register high growth amid global headwinds: RBI Governor

BusinessIndia-New Zealand FTA delivers tangible, wide-ranging benefits to economy

BusinessHanwha to work with US Navy for new frigates: Trump

BusinessS. Korea begins trial of mandatory face recognition for new mobile numbers

BusinessYear 2025 brought shift in global trade, focus on economic reforms to keep India on high-growth path: RBI