Dating apps don't want you to find a monogamous relationship and leave the apps. The business model in the first place is not geared toward what a lot of people actually are looking for. Some people, in fact, that is how they use the dating apps. They never even talk to someone or never even go on a date. It's been literally just a hot or not service to them.
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Dating apps combine many controversial concepts: technology, sex, societal change, economic intrigue . . . and the law. We are in the early stages of understanding how dating apps are affecting the way people interact. Our legal system is just now grappling with how to deal with bad actors in a world where accountability is scarce. To lay the ground work on these concepts is Irina Manta.
IRINA D. MANTA is a Professor of Law and the Founding Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law (CIPL) at the Maurice A. Deane School of Law at Hofstra University. Professor Manta’s research spans legal issues involving intellectual property, torts, the Internet, privacy, national security, and immigration. A graduate of Yale Law School and Yale University, she co-hosts the dating podcast “Strangers on the Internet“.
Dating apps- what is the problem?
A quick survey of the dating app scene: Hinge, Tinder, Bumble, Facebook?
Bad incentives that apps send especially to men: Technology and Incel culture . . . and scale
Legal problems – contract law, misrepresentation, privacy, torts etc . . . overlay of digital record-keeping on traditionally human interaction
Introducing accountability into the world of digital dating
Legal and extralegal measures (including cultural changes) need to be put in place.
Why hasn’t the free market solved some of these issues?
What are the collective action problems involved?
How (or who) should regulate this?
How does this drive a law professor to write a book and have a podcast around this?
“Frazer Rice is an employee of Next Capital Management, LLC. This podcast is not investment, legal, or tax advice, nor does it reflect the opinions of Next Capital Management. Any opinions represented in the show are Frazer’s individually and not an endorsement of the guest. This podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes and does not represent the opinions of any employers of the host or guest.