Online Daters Sue Matchmaking Sites For Fraud



By Martha Graybow

It's not easy finding love in cyberspace, and now some frustrated
online daters say they were victims of fraud by two top Internet
matchmaking services and have taken their complaints to court.

Match.com, a unit of IAC/Interactive Corp., is accused in a federal
lawsuit of goading members into renewing their subscriptions through
bogus romantic e-mails sent out by company employees. In some
instances, the suit contends, people on the Match payroll even went on
sham dates with subscribers as a marketing ploy.

"This is a grossly fraudulent practice that Match.com is engaged in,"
said H. Scott Leviant, a lawyer at Los Angeles law firm Arias, Ozzello
& Gignac LLP, which brought the suit.

Match "promotes the policies of integrity to protect members, and yet
they themselves, we allege, are misleading their entire customer
base," he said.

The company said it does not comment on pending litigation. But Match
spokeswoman Kristin Kelly said the company "absolutely does not"
employ people to go on dates with subscribers or to send members
misleading e-mails professing romantic interest. The company has about
15 million members worldwide and 250 employees, she said.

In a separate suit, Yahoo Inc.'s personals service is accused of
posting profiles of fictitious potential dating partners on its Web
site to make it look as though many more singles subscribe to the
service than actually do.

Yahoo spokeswoman Rochelle Adams said the company had no comment on
the lawsuit.

The suits, which both seek class-action status, came as growth in the
online dating industry has slowed, although Web matchmaking still
remains a big business.

U.S. consumers spent $245.2 million on online personals and dating
services in the first half of 2005, up 7.6 percent from a year
earlier, according to the Online Publishers Association. That's a
slower growth rate compared with several years ago.

At the same time, competition among online dating services is fierce,
with some sites offering newfangled features such as extensive
compatibility surveys to match up people with similar temperaments and
outlooks.

ALLEGATIONS OF 'DATE BAIT'

The Match lawsuit was filed earlier this month in U.S. District Court
in Los Angeles by plaintiff Matthew Evans, who contends he went out
with a woman he met through the site who turned out to be nothing more
than "date bait" working for the company.

The relationship went nowhere, according to his suit. Evans says Match
set up the date for him because it wanted to keep him from pulling the
plug on his subscription and was hoping he'd tell other potential
members about the attractive woman he met through the service,
according to Leviant.

His lawyers said Evans, of Orange County, California, was not
available to comment, but described him as a working professional in
his 30s.

Leviant said his client found out about the alleged scam after the
woman he dated confessed she was employed by Match. The lawsuit also
claims the company violated the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organization Act, a law best known for being used in prosecuting
organized crime.

The Yahoo suit was filed last month by Robert Anthony, of Broward
County, Florida. The suit, brought in U.S. District Court in San Jose,
California, accuses the company of breach of contract, fraud and
unfair trade practices.

Anthony's lawyer, Peter McNulty of the McNulty Law Firm in Bel Air,
California, did not respond to requests for comment.

Another complaint against Yahoo -- although not yet formalized
in a lawsuit contends that some men pose as females on the Yahoo
Romance and Personals site and attempt to lure other males to meet
them resulting in attempts to molest the 'innocent' teenage males.

Copyright 2005 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily.

For a humorous look at this problem, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/honesty.html for two cartoons which
illustrate the problems with 'internet chat'.

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: 3/2 wetsuit recommenations?
    ... Of course some people buy shoes online too.... ... We've been using ProMotion wetsuits since the early days when Dana moved the company to Hood River and they still had a San Diego factory... ... An ill fitting suit that lets water through ...
    (rec.windsurfing)
  • Re: Shared Workspace document doesnt show the status of on line m
    ... I have the same issue and think I have worked out why members appear not to ... area created from any template other than inheriting form the parent template ... then online collaboration will not work. ... workspace area that shows Online and Not Online members status. ...
    (microsoft.public.sharepoint.portalserver)
  • Re: Controlling ssh from an external program
    ... > I need to launch a SSH agent and SSH add and I would ... > Do You Yahoo!? ... Mail has the best spam ... Declare Yourself - Register online to vote today! ...
    (SSH)
  • Re: Shared Workspace document doesnt show the status of on line m
    ... Thanks Tim for Tip, let me try it out and see how it goes... ... I have the same issue and think I have worked out why members appear not to ... area created from any template other than inheriting form the parent template ... then online collaboration will not work. ...
    (microsoft.public.sharepoint.portalserver)
  • Discount Club Card that gives Cash Back
    ... MyWorldPLUS offers a discount membership card ... online shopping platform that allows people to earn cash back at over ... MyWorldPLUS is also a VERY profitable opportunity in itself. ... MyWorldPLUS gives our members yet another awesome ...
    (misc.consumers)