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Updated: Jul 29, 2025

Integrating Computerized Linguistic and Social Network Analyses to Capture Addiction Recovery Capital in an Online Community
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Selling visibility-boosts on dating apps: a problematic practice?

Bouke de Vries1,2

  • 1Department of Philosophy, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

Ethics and Information Technology
|May 23, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Dating apps offer paid visibility boosts, but their sale should be regulated or banned. This is due to moral and legal concerns, including exploiting user autonomy and creating socio-economic injustices.

Keywords:
AddictionAutonomyDating appsGamblingLoveRomantic relationshipsSocio-economic justiceTinderVisibility boosts

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Area of Science:

  • Social Science
  • Ethics
  • Law

Background:

  • Dating apps like Tinder, Bumble, and Badoo are primary platforms for seeking relationships and intimacy.
  • Many dating apps offer paid features to enhance user visibility for a limited time.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine the ethical and legal implications of selling visibility boosts on dating apps.
  • To argue for the regulation or prohibition of these paid features.

Main Methods:

  • Ethical analysis of paid visibility boosts.
  • Examination of legal frameworks concerning unconscionable contracts.
  • Argumentation based on user autonomy and socio-economic justice.

Main Results:

  • Paid visibility boosts on dating apps raise significant moral concerns.
  • These features may exploit users with impaired autonomy.
  • The sale of visibility boosts can exacerbate socio-economic inequalities.

Conclusions:

  • There are compelling moral and legal reasons to regulate or ban the sale of dating app visibility boosts.
  • Such features risk undermining fair access to social and romantic opportunities.
  • Policy interventions are needed to address the ethical and societal impacts of these monetization strategies.