Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Mobile
  4. News

What does Grindr’s acquisition by a Chinese company mean for users?

Add as a preferred source on Google

At the beginning of 2018, Grindr officially became a Chinese-owned app. The popular gay dating service, which boasts 3.3 million daily users, has been a mainstay on the romance scene for the LGBT community for the last seven years. For the last two of those years, China-based tech firm Kunlun Group has been the app’s majority investor — and now, it has full ownership.

But this recent move has a few intelligence officials and China experts rather concerned about what this could mean for users and their privacy. As initially reported by the Washington Post, the recent buy-out could mean the Chinese government would be able to “demand sensitive and embarrassing details on the lives of millions of non-Chinese citizens.”

Recommended Videos

China already has a history of maintaining stringent controls over apps and web services throughout the country, and has often banned communication apps that don’t follow its strict rules and regulations. Not only are social media sites like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter inaccessible, but so too are apps like WhatsApp and, most recently, Skype. But aside from controlling citizens’ access to certain services, China is also purportedly collecting information on both citizens and foreigners alike.

“What you can see from Chinese intelligence practices is a clear effort to collect a lot of personal information on a lot of different people, and to build a database of names that’s potentially useful either for influence or for intelligence,” said Peter Mattis, a former U.S. government intelligence analyst and China fellow at the Jamestown Foundation. “Then later, when the party-state comes into contact with someone in the database, there’s now information to be pulled,” he said.

Increasingly, the U.S. government is becoming wary of Chinese acquisition of American companies. In fact, at the beginning of the year, an American panel rejected the buyout of MoneyGram International by Alibaba subsidiary Ant Financial, citing national security concerns.

That said, Grindr’s vice president of marketing, Peter Sloterdyk, told the Post that “the privacy and security of users’ personal data is a top priority for Grindr, which employs state-of-the-art technical means to protect user data over 190 countries.” He also added that the app has “never disclosed any user data to the Chinese government nor does it intend to do so.”

All the same, it’s unclear what the relationship is between the Chinese government and its large international companies, so for the time being, we still don’t have a concrete sense of what the Kunlun acquisition means for Grindr users. And that might be cause for concern in and of itself.

Lulu Chang
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
X is teaching its AI algorithm something social networks once understood
A new ranking tweak gives mutuals more visibility after X found that friendship data was missing from an algorithm shaping who appears in replies
Twitter X Logo Featured

X has discovered a bold new strategy for making social media feel social again. It’s going to show your posts more often to people you actually know.

According to X product head Nikita Bier, the platform is boosting the visibility of posts among mutuals, meaning accounts that follow each other. He said this relationship data had been missing from the algorithm, leaving familiar accounts less visible when reply sections filled up.

Read more
Instagram and WhatsApp lead in sextortion reports, iMessage is weaponized against teenagers: Report
Over 2,000 complaints in six months, and the platforms are still playing catch-up.
Child using a blue phone

If you use Instagram, WhatsApp, or iMessage, you need to know what is happening on these platforms. Australia's online safety regulator, eSafety, has published a new transparency report, and the findings are grim. 

As reported by The Guardian, the regulator found significant gaps in how the biggest tech companies are handling online sexual extortion and child sexual exploitation, even as the reports keep climbing.

Read more
Europe plans a wide social media ban for children
The plan would bar kids under 13 from social media completely, with looser rules for teens up to 18.
Child using a red iPhone

Europe is taking its biggest step yet toward keeping kids off social media entirely. A panel of experts today handed the European Commission a report recommending sweeping new age restrictions, according to a New York Times report. Commission president Ursula von der Leyen is expected to turn those recommendations into a formal law proposal in September.

What the proposal aims to restrict

Read more