Ask HN: Dating app thirst-trapping non-premium users ethical?
I am writing this from Banglore, India. I do see a tendency by dating apps to thirst trap users into buying a premium subscription. By thirst-trapping I mean they will show someone liked your profile when actually it a programmatically generated marketing tactic. I wonder how often these practices tend to happen around us.
4 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 18.7 ms ] threadI've worked on one of the major dating apps, and it really is so gamified. It depends what you are after. If you want long term relationship or want to find someone with whom you can settle down, do not rely on these apps.
IMO, find a hobby / meetup group and go to events, and try to find someone while doing things you both enjoy doing together. I think you will:
1. Not waste your time and money.
2. Get to know someone while doing something you enjoy.
3. Find something meaningful. (Yes, those apps do work for some people, but those are a small minority - if your goal is a LTR or settling down).
For example, you'd be surprised at the number of people who have met on Twitter. It's quite a lot.
Even John Carmack recently met his significant other on there following his divorce.
https://twitter.com/ID_AA_Carmack/status/1530022920130543630...