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Have you ever wanted to see one of your &hate-reads& stretched out to feature-film length If so, you&ll want to watch HBOnew documentary, &Swiped,& which takes a depressing, trigger-inducing and damning look at online dating culture, and specifically Tinderoutsized influence in the dating app business.
The film evolved from journalist Nancy Jo Sales& 2015 Vanity Fair piece, entitled &Tinder and the Dawn of the ‘Dating Apocalypse,& which was criticized at the time for its narrow focus on 20-something, largely heterosexual women in an urban setting. The piece had extrapolated out their personal dating struggles and turned them into a condemnation of the entire online dating market.
But the VF piece was actually more memorable for Tinderresponse.
The company & well, it went off.
In a 30-tweet tirade(thatstill some of the best of the internet, mind you), the company lost its ever-lovin& mind on both Vanity Fair and Nancy Jo Sales alike.
One sample tweet from the Tinder meltdown: &@VanityFair: Little know fact: sex was invented in 2012 when Tinder was launched.&
Ah, take that! Right! Right
Despite the complete PR buffoonery, Tinder had a point.
The VF piece wasn&t representative of Tinderlarger user base, only a sliver. And the complaints from a few users couldn&t be used to make a point about the entire industry.
Besides, what exactly was unique about those complaints
Was it truly swipe culture to blame for the mistakes made in dating and sexual experimentation, when you&re young Don&t you at least once or twice have to choose the wrong person, so you can begin to triangulate on whatright
Unfortunately, the film doesn&t fully correct the articleproblem in terms of its demographic samplings.
It still mostly relies on anecdotes told by (usually drunk) 20-somethings, which are then spliced up by the occasional expert commentary.
And the subjects are often really, really drunk.
Thereone scene where a young woman is so wasted, ithard to believe she gave the filmmaker informed consent to use her footage.
(Not the one below. But I&m pretty sure those Solo cups aren&t filled with lemonade.)
Meanwhile, the expert commentary has its highlights, too.
Thereone expert & April Alliston, a Princeton professor & who breastfeeds her baby on camera while giving her commentary on pornography. (Oh yes, please discuss rape porn while the baby suckles your breast, thank you very much.)
Look how cool and progressive we are! is the unspoken subtext, even as the film continues to subtly vilify casual sex among young adults, or act as if Tinder itself is somehow entirely responsible for the callous behavior of its users.
Unlike the magazine article, the film does slightly expand its cast of characters to include gender non-conforming and other LGBTQ people, more people of color, and & well, itTinder! & a couple interested in threesomes.
But the general slice of the Tinder user base interviewed remains young, urban, and, in some cases, fairly vapid.
As for &Swiped&s& milieu, much of its action is in the city.
Specifically, scene after scene in the film is labeled, &New York, New York,& as if the experiences of people in this competitive and uniquemarket & a place where leveling up to something better is a way of life & could somehow represent a universal truth applicable to all of Tinderestimated 50 million users.
The film does, however, cover nearly everything thatawful about dating apps & from young men ordering girls to their door as if ita meal from Seamless, to the overwhelming sense of dread and the depression that results from being on dating apps & or really, the internet itself & for too long.
There are also scenes touching nearly every Tinder trope:
The sending of dick pics; men posing with fish in their profile photos; that supposedly happy couple &looking for a third& (spoiler alert: they&re not happy and are broken up by end of film); the &DTF& come-ons; and basically every other reason people delete these apps in the first place.
Where the film is somewhat stronger is when it talks about the very real psychological tricks Tinder and other dating apps have adopted to keep users engaged and addicted to swiping.
Tinder, itpointed out, uses gamification techniques: Brain tricks like intermittent variable rewards that are proven to work on pigeons, no less!
You see, if you don&t know when you&re getting the reward & a treat, a match, etc. & you end up playing the game more often, the psychologists explain.
One of the better quotes on this topic comes from Tinder co-founder and CSO Jonathan Badeen, where he essentially compares the act of using Tinder to doing drugs or gambling.
&We have some of these game-like elements, where you almost feel like you&re being rewarded,& says Baden. &It kinda works like a slot machine, where you&re excited to see who the next person is, or, hopefully, you&re excited to see ‘did I get the match& and get that ‘Ita Match& screen Ita nice little rush,& he enthuses.
Yeah.
Yikes.
Of course, these are concerns that extend beyond the online dating app industry.
Social media apps, in general, have been more recently called out for similar behaviors &for leveraging psychological loopholes to addict their users in unhealthy ways.
The ramifications of our smartphone addictionsare only now being examined, in fact.
Apple and Google, for example, have just launched screen time controls aimed at giving us a chance at fighting back at the dangerous dark patterns and brain hacks these apps use. (Appletoolset is only arriving in iOS 12 & which is just now getting to the public.)
Itcertainly fair to criticize companies like Tinder and Bumble for bringing these gamification tricks into delicate areas like those where the focus is supposedly on forming real human connections or &finding love.& But itdisingenuous to act as if this is something unique to Tinder (et al) and not just, generally, the god-awful state of the tech industry as a whole at present.
The only other worthwhile part to &Swiped& is where the film points out that no one knows if any of these addictive apps actually succeed in helping people find real relationships.
Dating app companies don&t have any data on how many lasting relationships result from their appusage, &Swiped& finds. Itodd, as tech companies are usually data hungry beasts. And success rates would seemingly be the exact kind of metric a company claiming to solve issues around relationship-finding would want to track.
Though everyone today seems to know someone who &met on an app,& itunclear what portion of the user base is actually finding long-term success with those relationships. The dating app companies have no idea, either, the film proclaims.
Asked how many people who met on Tinder got married or ended up in committed relationships, Jessica Carbino, a sociologist at Tinder,tells the filmmaker: &we do not have that information available.& She then adds she&inundated with emails& from Tinder users getting married and having babies.
(She also hilariously defends casual hookups as something that people go to church to pursue, too, so don&t blame Tinder for that! I mean, sometimes this film is just comedy gold, I swear.)
Of course, with a user base in the tens of millions, a good handful of happy emails should be expected. Itdefinitely not evidence that Tinder is any better than the alternative & bars, blind dates, introductions through friends, etc.
The film then drives this particular point home by citing user studies by both Tinder and the more relationship-focused dating app Hinge, which seem indicate that swiped-based dating doesn&t work.
&80% of Tinder users are looking for a serious relationship,& says one Tinder survey. The text then fades, and the next statistic, this time from Hinge, appears.
&81% of users have never found a long-term relationship on any swiping app,& it says.
By the end of the film, itclear you&re expected to delete Tinder and all the other dating apps off your phone and get on with your life.
However, as with Facebook and social media, backlash doesn&t mean abandonment.
Tinderswipe culture is the new normal. Itright to hold it accountable in areas it can do better & reporting and abuse, for example & but itnot going away anytime soon.
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Read more: I watched HBO’s Tinder-shaming doc ‘Swiped’ so you don’t have to
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Vodafone’s ultrafast broadband service will be available to parts of Milton Keynes from October and the company hopes some aggressive pricing will encourage adoption.
The operator has offered fixed broadband services to consumer and businesses for a number of years using Openreach’s fibre to the cabinet (FTTC) network.
However last year it reached a
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Welcome to TheIndianSubcontinent's latest iPhone launch live blog.
It's new iPhone day, and we're in California ready for the Apple launch event where we're expecting to see three new phones, a watch and maybe even a new tablet at the Steve Jobs Theater at Apple HQ.
The event kicks off at 10am PT, 1pm ET, 6pm BST, and we'll keep you updated will
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Read more: New iPhone launch event live blog: all the latest from the Apple event
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The names of the three upcoming 2018 iPhones have so far been a confusing mess, but a leak from Apple's own website may have just confirmed the names we'll hear announced on stage later today.
According to Apple's own product sitemap, the new products will be called the iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max and iPhone XR.
Spotted by ATH (with extra context added
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Read more: iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max and iPhone XR names leaked from Apple's own site
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T-Mobile has reached a $3.5 billion deal with Ericsson for 5G network equipment, allowing the self-styled “un-carrier” to press ahead with its plans for a nationwide rollout in the US.
The deal includes core network hardware and software, including products from the recently updated Ericsson Radio System (ERS) range.
In addition to laying the
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Microsoft has pushed out another fresh preview build for the big Windows 10 update due next month (Redstone 5), with a bunch of general fixes for fast ring testers, and one more interesting change highlighted which aims to help you manage your drive space better.
Storage Sense is, as the name suggests, all about enabling you to make more sensible
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Read more: New Windows 10 preview shows off storage trick to save you disk space
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