The document discusses the history and growth of online dating from Match.com's launch in 1995 to the billions generated annually by the industry today. It notes that niche dating sites have emerged to serve specific demographics and that mobile dating apps have become popular especially with teens and students. While online dating provides opportunities, it also poses safety risks like potential encounters with criminals. The concept of "catfishing" is explained, along with the MTV show it inspired. Overall, the document suggests that online dating has become a mainstream part of modern romance due to the variety of sites and erosion of the stigma once associated with it.
2. Online Dating
The first big online dating website was Match.com
• Launched in 1995
• Now the world’s largest online dating site
BY THE NUMBERS:
54 million – the total number of single people in the United States
25 million – the number of people who used dating sites in April 2011
Over $1 billion – annual revenue from the online dating industry
52.4% – male users
47.6% – female users
5. Online Dating
Individuals who face a small dating market are
particularly able to benefit from niche dating services
and websites.
• Gays, lesbians, middle-aged people are groups
most likely to rely on the Internet for finding a
potential suitor
6. Online Dating
At 26, women have more online pursuers than men. But by age 48, men
have twice as many as women.
In their online profiles…
• Women lie most about weight, physical build, and age.
• Men lie most about age, height and income.
7. Smartphone Apps
A different kind of online dating has chosen the mobile route – social media
apps geared toward dating and connecting with members of the opposite
sex (or same sex, in the case of Grindr) have become increasingly
popular, especially with teens and college students.
• Mobile, location-based services that match based on physical
location
8. Safety Concerns
As with any type of online activity, dating on the web comes with safety
concerns.
• Risks include theft of personal information/identity, dangerous
situations as a result of meeting up with someone you met
online
In 2011, a woman filed a lawsuit against Match.com in California state
court after allegedly being raped by a man she met through the
website, who turned out to be a convicted sex offender.
• Match.com now screens
members for being registered
sex offenders
9. Catfishing
A “catfish” is someone who makes a fake online profile and starts
relationships with other people based on the fake entity they have
created for themselves.
Last year, catfishing gained national attention when it was revealed
that Notre Dame football player Manti Te’o was the victim of an
elaborate catfishing scheme.
10. Catfishing
Recently, MTV created a show called “Catfish,” in which they find unsuspecting people
who are in online catfishing relationships and set up a face-to-face meeting with their
online partners.
• Now in its 2nd season, the show has revealed all sorts of reasons why catfish
use their deceptive techniques, including “embarrassment about a weight
problem, discomfort with emerging sexual identity, [and] outright malice.”
11. Online vs. Offline Dating
The advent of Internet dating has lead to a shift in the way people interact.
Difference: Face-to-face communication.
• Traditional ways of getting to know another person are discarded when the
computer becomes a main barrier.
• Rather than learning about that person through body language, behavior, and
appearance, people are forced to instead interpret solely through text.
Although trusting a stranger online is a common and valid concern, more individuals are
turning to online dating websites as invaluable resources for their love lives
• According to some researchers, they “may even experience greater
interpersonal and romantic connections online than in their offline lives”
12. Love at First Click
Finding love has now become integrated with modern technology, and
some say it has never been easier to develop a relationship.
• “Love at first click” has been made possible by the thousands of
online dating websites and services that target both broad and
extremely narrow populations, and the stigma associated with
online dating has essentially been erased.
Online dating has proven to be quite successful. In a modern world that
relies heavily on technology, online dating is certain to be a viable option
for interpersonal romantic connections for years to come.
Notes de l'éditeur
For example, Christian Mingle and J Date cater to members of the Christian and Jewish religions, respectively. A site called Matrimony.com recently launched in India to help set up cultural arranged marriages.
There are even some extremely specific sites, like this one called Farmers Only dating. I saw this commercial on TV here in Columbia a few days ago and thought it was hilarious.
While these apps do have the possibility of connecting individuals who will date or marry in the future, they are most widely regarded as technological tools that allow people to “hook up” with each other without the hassle of a relationship.
However, the motivations of seemingly innocent people can turn out to be dangerous regardless of whether that person has a criminal background or not.
Another danger of online dating is catfishing.A “catfish” is someone who makes a fake online profile and starts relationships with other people based on the fake entity they have created for themselves. Catfish go to great lengths to find fake pictures of themselves. They also work hard to avoid any in-person meetings with their online partner.