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Infos for : online dating uk |
Online dating - then and now.The golden age of online dating is upon us. Just ask executives of Match.com, who last month reported a 195 percent increase in paid subscribers over the same quarter last year. Or look at Yahoo, where online personals have increased the company's revenues despite a decline in income from advertising. Or talk to any youngish single person in New York. When I asked a friend, who met her last boyfriend online, how many of her single friends had used or are currently using online dating services, she replied, "Pretty much all of them." Look no further than the "Personals of the Day" you see pop up on this site, as well as the Onion and countless other sites, and you'll realize two things: One, online personals have become a major source of revenue for content sites, and two, there are some damn fine-looking young folks floating around out there. Unless Spring Street Networks, the source of those ads, has been inventing fictional singles with a crack team of models, stylists, marketers and professional photographers, there appear to be a great many attractive people online these days, shamelessly hamming it up in the hopes of meeting that special anyone. It's a far cry from the spring of 1996, when I attended a
party for Match.com that was populated primarily by computer
programmers who looked like they hadn't left the server room of
their start-up offices in several months, their only contact
with other humans limited to those moments when they braved the
weak San Francisco sunlight to fetch a banana moon pie from the
company's vending machine, or to scuttle over to Cafe Centro for
a quadruple nonfat latte. That tall blond girl who worked there
sure was cute, but she was sort of mean! So how did everything change so quickly, and why have people begun peddling themselves so shamelessly online? The truth is, most young people see nothing the least bit embarrassing about online dating or "man shopping" as one woman referred to it in a recent New York Times article. Maybe kids today are far less self-conscious about romance and love in general, thanks to not having been exposed to "The Love Boat" during their formative years. The more likely explanation, though, is that the anonymity of the medium, the prevalence of blogs, online photo galleries and personal Web sites, and the comfort most of us feel in corresponding entirely through e-mail have combined to make online dating a perfectly acceptable means of meeting new people. Demand creates supply. When you think for a minute about how inefficient and circuitous the traditional delivery system for meeting potential lovers is, it's not hard to see how we landed here. When your options are limited to getting set up by your friends, going out to parties or going to smoky bars in the hopes of getting drunk enough to knock over someone with a pulse, it's clear why shopping for a mate online has been embraced by mainstream America. Imagine, if you will, trying to buy a food processor without
a Best Buy, or a Macy's, or a Williams-Sonoma. Imagine if you
had to go to crowded parties and other tedious functions and
search the crowd for someone with an old Cuisinart at home that
they might be willing to sell you. Furthermore, imagine if it
were considered rude to bring up the Cuisinart straight off the
bat -- instead, you were expected to ask people about
themselves, maybe buy them a drink, and feign interest in their
rambling, self-involved banter, until finally, at the end of the
night, loosened up by a few drinks, you could say what had been
on your mind for hours: And despite all that effort, imagine that the person's face drops, and he or she replies politely, but in a clipped, uncomfortable tone, "No, I'm not really into that kind of thing," and then exits the party without even asking for your number in case he or she ever does get the urge to process. By Heather Havrilesky |

Herald Scotland
Herald Scotland
Online dating operator Easydate is conducting its own courtship with Flirt.com after signing a six-month “try-before-you-buy” deal to run the site. ...

New York Daily News
Toronto Sun
By QMI Agency "Welcome to reality," is the greeting on the latest entrant in the world of online dating sites. But this one is special: it's an exclusive ...
Ugly People Get Their Own Dating Site
Dating Site for Ugly People: Offensive or Useful?
Huffington Post (blog)
Huffington Post: Where do you see social media fitting in with online dating? Greg Waldorf: If you ask most people how social media plays into dating, ...
PR Newswire (press release)
DateBid is an auction-style, ice-breaker game for meeting new people that brings a unique blend of social gaming and online dating to social network ...

Daily Mail
Daily Mail
Of the 16 million singles in the UK, 60 per cent have tried online dating at some point. I've even heard my friends' many bad experiences of online dating. ...
Modern Ghana
Then there is a site for you: www.darwindating.com, where their tagline is: online dating minus ugly people. And don't be too full of yourself, ...
Sydney Morning Herald
With a recent RSVP Date of the Nation report finding a quarter of Australians have used an online dating site and another 38 per cent are considering it, ...
Daily News & Analysis
She found Scott Gibson on an online dating site Match.com, just weeks after dumping her decorator boyfriend. The twice-married mum-of-four sent the ...

The Sun
The Sun
INTERNET dating has never been bigger - but for many it's more about SEX than finding true love. Over seven million people in the UK are signed up to online ...
How an online dating revolution is changing romantic life
Toronto Sun
In contrast, TheUglyBugBall.co.uk is for everyone else, particularly those people who are "sick of all the twee lovey dovey dating sites that show perfectly ...
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