Facebook Plans a Dating Feature

Facebook Plans a Dating Feature
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Facebook announced it’s rolling out a new dating feature, sending shares in matchmaking app company Match and its owner IAC/InterActive plunging, according to Bloomberg.

The feature would help connect people who aren’t Facebook friends and be for “building real, long-term relationships, not just for hookups,“ CEO Mark Zuckerberg said during a presentation at the company’s F8 developer conference. Match, which owns apps like Tinder and OkCupid, fell as much as 21 percent, the most in more than two years, while IAC fell as much as 14 percent.

The announcement shows how Facebook is pushing forward with new products and initiatives for engagement, even as it tries to win back public trust after an outcry over how much data it collects from people online and what it does with it. Zuckerberg acknowledged that Facebook needs “to do more to keep people safe but we will also keep building.“

The dating feature would be opt-in only and users would be able to build their profile out of the view of their Facebook friends. The news was one of several new initiatives announced, including a feature that lets people post to Instagram from other, non-Facebook apps like Spotify, and the ability to “clear history,“ to remove data sent to the social network via outside websites and apps.

With a new dating app, Facebook could potentially leverage its extensive web of connections among people and data on relationships. Such a service could give social network a whole new avenue for growing its advertising business. If Facebook steps into dating in a big way it could have an impact on Match’s ability to acquire new users. Most dating apps make money by charging users for premium services, something Facebook might not have to do if it uses data from the apps to improve its advertising business.

Match, which has acquired its way to becoming the clear leader in the dating field, uses Facebook to authenticate users on some of its apps, making the social media network a key part of its business. Facebook had already been changing what information it makes available to other companies like Match as part of its efforts to improve its privacy reputation.