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December 21, 2011

Like Me Date Me

Filed under: date, dating, facebook, online, profile, service, site, users — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 6:32 am

By Adam DuVander

Like Me Date Me is a new dating site built on top of the Facebook Graph API, which provides search-able access to user profile information. The service displays a photo and limited profile information of whichever gender you want to see. As the name of the site implies, users can “like” others, which can then lead to more interaction. The ratings approach, encouraging snap judgments, is similar to HotOrNot, which also added an option to meet the people you rate.

The service launched today to capitalize on the Valentine-less. To use it, you must sign into Facebook and give it access to your own profile information. Then, apparently using factors such as interests, age and location, it finds you potential matches. If you’re interested, you click the ubiquitous “like” button. Otherwise, click “next.”

Like Me Date Me claims to be the first to use Facebook’s Like button for online matchmaking, which seems hard to believe. And while it’s also difficult to envision winning many users with the slogan “welcome to the meat market,” it’s certainly a novel use of Facebook’s API. If this functionality it not already integrated into dating sites, I would expect it to be soon.

September 29, 2011

Online Dating Sites Know You Better Than You Know Yourself

Filed under: algorithm, criteria, guys, looking, match, online, profiles, site, woman — Tags: , , , , , , , , — admin @ 2:29 pm

Dating online involves doing awkward stuff like describing your taste in music and explaining what your hypothetical “perfect” match would be like. But when it comes right down to it, what you say you want is not necessarily what will make you happy. And the folks behind Match.com know this.

As David Gelles writes for the Financial Times, Match.com has been working on an “improved matchmaking algorithm.” Mandy Ginsberg, the president of the site, tried JDate when she got out of college but is married to someone she used to work with — and he’s not Jewish. “If I had laid out a criteria for what I was looking for, it would not have been a guy from south India,” she says. “People are complex.” So Match.com uses a complicated algorithm that attempts to “learn” from a user’s habits.

Amarnath Thombre, a engineer at Match.com, explains further: “Before, matches were based on the criteria you set. You meet her criteria, and she meets yours, so you’re a good match… But when we researched the data the whole idea of dissonance came into focus. People were doing something very different from the things they said they wanted on their profile.”

Gelles interviews a woman, Karrah O’Daniel, who in October will marry a man she met online. She was looking for a dude between the ages of 21 and 26; he was 28; she was looking for a guy whose body was “about average” or “athletic and toned”; he described himself as “stocky.” “We didn’t match, but you can’t really sum up a person in a check box,” says O’Daniel. Gelles points out that O’Daniel and her fiancé never really searched for one another at all — the site suggested he check out her profile. “They were introduced by the algorithm.”

For instance: If you claim you’re not interested in older guys but click on the profiles of a bunch of older guys, the algorithm will realize that you’re open to older guys and start suggesting profiles of men above your age limit. The formula is big business: Match.com is owned by digital media group IAC. Last year Match.com and IAC’s other online dating sites generated $401 million. (IAC also owns Chemistry.com and OkCupid.)

The question, of course, is whether or not this algorithm means Match.com is successful. You hear a few romantic tales like Karrah O’Daniel’s, and then there are the other stoires.

“The Match algorithm should have figured out that I don’t want a 45-year-old from New Jersey,” said one frustrated thirty-something professional woman from Manhattan. “Every time I log on I feel faintly insulted.”

Maybe love is the one problem computers can’t solve.

September 27, 2011

Is It Prostitution?

By Daily Mail Reporter

A website has been accused of promoting prostitution by helping cash-strapped college students pay off their debts by dating older men.

SeekingArrangement.com offers its “sugar babies” the opportunity to collect money through ‘dates’ with older, more financially set men.

One of the site’s users, “Taylor,” said she was paid $350 to have sex with a man more than twice her age.

Taylor said: “I just wanted to get out of that situation as safely as possible, pay off my debt, and move on.”

Brandon Wade, the founder of Seeking Arrangement, told the Huffington Post that business is booming.

“Over the past few years, the number of college students using our site has exploded.

“College students are one of the biggest segments of our sugar babies and the numbers are growing all the time.’

The “sugar daddies” are offered companionship and possibly much more, depending on how much they’re willing to pay.

And Seeking Arrangement isn’t alone – several other sites operate under the same pretenses.

And this raises the question: Are Seeking Arrangement’s 800,000 members guilty of prostitution?

Ronald Weitzer, a sociology professor at George Washington University, said: “Under the banner of sugar daddy and sugar baby arrangements, a lot of prostitution may be going on.”

Las Vegas lawyer Allen Lichtenstein said the legal parameters of prostitution are clouded.

Mr Lichtenstein said: “Any relationship that is an ongoing one that’s not purely about sex but may have a sexual aspect to it, you can’t really classify as prostitution.”

A study in Berlin found one in three students there would consider sex-for-money trades as a reasonable way to fund education.

September 24, 2011

Cloud Girlfriend Launches as a Dating Site for Role Players

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 1:29 pm

Get your head in the clouds. That’s the tagline for Cloud Girlfriend, a new dating website that wants to help you find the perfect girlfriend. Problem is, you won’t be able to go on any actual, real-life dates with that girlfriend once you find her because she’ll be fake. Not computer-generated fake, but fake in the way that your mom always worried about when she first sent you off on your own into the wilds of AOL chatrooms and message boards as a kid. These are other people, based somewhere in the real world. Other people with (presumably) day jobs and a lives who like to imagine themselves as someone else. It’s role-playing on the web.

“We allow people to define their ideal self, find their perfect girlfriend or boyfriend and connect and interact as if that person existed,” David Fuhriman, the co-founder of Cloud Girlfriend, told TechCrunch’s Alexia Tsotsis. “It can help in learning how to manage a real relationship, and they then take it into the real world,“ he added, describing his start-up as a combination of Match.com and Second Life.

It took a while for Fuhriman’s idea to be realized. It’s been in the works for a while now, first as a site that would allow users to create fake Facebook profiles and interact with others through that account. But that idea ran up against a lot of bad press as it would conflict with Facebook’s Terms of Service and force many users of the social network who are uncomfortable with anonymity on the web to rethink their profiles’ very existence. How many of your Facebook friends want to receive incessant pokes from fake user accounts?

Cloud Girlfriend, now a standalone site, will keep all role players linked together and confined to one Internet ghetto where they can flirt — and poke, or its Cloud Girlfriend equivalent — all they want without irritating others. Women can sign up easily; men need a code passed along from another user.

Fuhriman plans to monetize the site by allowing users to send virtual goods to each other: Cloud Diamonds, Cloud Flowers, even a Cloud Vacation.

While I think this site is far-fetched — I live virtually, but not anonymously — don’t dismiss it yet. Five minutes after Tsotsis joined, she writes, she had a date.

August 25, 2011

How Do You Choose Which Site Is For You?

Filed under: dating, matching, members, online, people, site, users — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 1:26 pm

Jumping into the online dating pool is overwhelming for a noob. The Internet dating virgin will hem and haw at the prospect of resorting to seeking mates through a series of filters and personality quizzes. They’ll confide in friends, whispering, “I just don’t think I’m… that kind of person.” In many ways, a beginner becomes his or her own worst enemy by buying into the stigmatization of meeting someone online.

Once the novice gives in and signs up for a site, it’s common to become discouraged rather quickly; reinforcing the idea that online dating isn’t for them. What’s interesting is that, if you have experience in this arena, you’re able to quickly distinguish that most of the troubles a newcomer faces stem directly from the site they chose to sign up for. Veterans of the game can sum up every major dating site in a few words. Match.com and E-Harmony are for people who are looking to get hitched. J-Date is the site you sign up for to appease your Bubbe.

“Online dating” isn’t a catchall. Each site offers a unique matching algorithm, and each site attracts a certain type of user. Here are how the top sites “match” up (so to speak).

eHarmony
Established: 1997
Cost:$60 for 1 month; $239 for 1 year

Matching Technique: Users answer a series of questions that account for “29 dimensions of compatibility.” The user pool is select – you can and will get turned away if you don’t click with the already-approved users in their database.

Intensity Level: 10 (You can’t even exist on the site unless you’re compatible with pre-existing users. These people are not messing around.)

Match.com
Established: 1995
Cost: $34.99 for 1 month; $215.88 for 1 year

Matching Technique: Users choose everything from income to smoking habits for their potential mate. There’s also a section to briefly describe yourself and what you’re looking for. The less selective you are while checking off criteria, the higher you’ll rate with other singles.

Intensity Level: 8. (They’re the first legitimate internet dating site, and their users take the brand recognition to heart. They’re trying to get hitched.)

How About We
Established: 2010
Cost: $28 for 1 month; $96 for 1 year

Matching Technique: To put a spin on online dating, How About We users simply propose dates to the site at large and wait for the responses to roll in. Profiles prompt members to complete phrases that are atypical of dating sites like, “Obscure knowledge I posses” and, “My life history in five sentences or fewer.” The site recently added a search filter that eliminates dates proposed by members who are undesirable to the searcher (based on height, smoking status, politics, and more).

Intensity Level: 5 (The site aims to send people on original dates, not set you up with a life partner – fun! But for people who like to message extensively with no intention of taking it offline – intense! HAW breaks even; in that respect.)

OkCupid
Established: ~2007 (spurred from the now defunct TheSpark.com’s SparkMatch feature)
Cost: Free (or $10 a month for an ad-free, A-List account)

Matching Technique: OkCupid’s algorithms are mathematically based and exponentially evolved when compared to its competitors. Members take a never-ending poll that evaluates not only their answer a question, but also how their match should answer, and how important the question is to the user. The more questions a user answers, the more accurate their matches become. A technical explanation of how this works can be found on their site.

Intensity Level: 5 (Most users use the site to date casually – they’re not willing to shell out money to meet their “soulmate.” However, the accuracy of their matches will translate offline.)

Plenty of Fish
Established: 2004
Cost: Free

Matching Technique: The “Plentyoffish Relationship Chemistry Predictor” measures five broad dimensions of personality, like Family Orientation and Self-Control. Basically, it’s the poor man’s eHarmony. Users aren’t required to submit text-heavy self-summaries.

Intensity Level: 3 (Sometimes, you really do get what you pay for.)

There are countless options online and there are dozens of niche-based sites that cater to specific religions, races, and sexualities. It’s no wonder that newcomers are overwhelmed – but should that stop them from becoming one of the 1 in 5 people who are currently dating someone they met online?

Joining the ranks to help hesitant daters find the best fit is TheRightDatingSite.com. There’s no registration – you answer eight simple questions and based on extensive research and a proprietary algorithm, the site will provide the dater-in-question with the best website for them. The site also publishes helpful articles that guide new virtual daters.

If you’re already dating online, would you stick with the site you’re on? If you’re not, would you use TheRightDatingSite to guide you?

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