• KombatWombat@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I’m always surprised to hear people unimpressed with others on dating apps. A couple of my friends have shared their “feeds” and I was struck by how many good-looking people are out there. But they would swipe away from just the smallest turn-offs becoming deal breakers. Like if I saw these people in real life, I would think of them as average looking at worst, many being remarkably attractive. This is in the 20s to mid 30s range like the tweet. I definitely understand deciding you’re incompatible based on politics or religion or culture but most of the time it would be for minor quirks. It felt like they were spoiled for choice in my eyes.

    But then again, they’re in serious long term relationships with conventionally attractive and supportive partners now so maybe being picky pays off. At the time, their reluctance to settle was a very frustrating experience for them.

    • _g_be@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Reluctant to settle, spoiled for choice, great ways of describing the situation.

      the apparently-bottomless firehose of faces that makes you desensitized, the anonymous dismissal of them makes you callous.

      The apps are just another dopamine slot machine, so the companies don’t care and in fact would rather keep people in their app.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        ‘Look at all these people that think I’m pretty, who I could have if I wanted to.’’

        It’s the mirror from Snow White, but it lies better the more you pay it, the more time you spend staring at it.

        Skinner box.

        Wire the rat up to stimulate its pleasure receptors if it pushes button.

        Rat will push button untill it dies of dehydration.

      • Denjin@lemmings.world
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        1 day ago

        Any dating app that was any good at its stated aim wouldn’t be able to make enough money to survive.

        By definition dating apps don’t want you to meet a partner, they want you addicted to swiping and tapping and almost finding a partner. If you hook up a few times along the way then that’s just a secondary benefit and keeps that carrot dangling in front of you.

      • No_Eponym@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        Yeah, if you actually find someone app usage will drop for at least some people, maybe even most people. The more exclusive some/many folks are the less they’ll open the app. Up to finding someone(s) that fully satisfy them for at least a while, and for that while that user may even be completely off the app. Maybe they even delete it. Certainly they won’t compulsively be using it the same way they are when they are trying to connect.

        For many (not all) users, successfully finding connections is detrimental to engagement, advertising, active user stats, etc. The incentives for the company are not geared towards helping users connect, and are geared towards always having users continually trying to connect.

    • Ilovethebomb@sh.itjust.works
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      24 hours ago

      There’s definitely a lot of people who overestimate what they bring to a relationship, and I think women are more prone to it than men because they’re typically the ones being pursued.

    • morphballganon@lemmynsfw.com
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      1 day ago

      Apps will selectively group more attractive people together to increase the like/dislike ratio. So YMMV depending on whether you’re currently in the attractive group or not.