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In the age of internet dating, we're all Tinder Swindlers now

Dating is a fundamentally misleading process

February 23, 2022 14:39
SC-Simon-Leviev-Comp-copy
3 min read

When someone asks me how tall I am, I don’t have one answer. Despite the empirical, objective fact that I’m five foot 11, my height is actually more of a Schrodinger’s number, changing depending the observer. 

To prospective dates on Tinder it’s six foot two, on Hinge, where an element of realism is expected, it’s six-foot exactly. A white lie, the sort which has been told by men for generations before smartphones even existed, the sort men and women will probably tell till the end of time.

 You might think that there’s a world of difference between this sort of relatively harmless mistruth and the elaborate scams conducted by Tinder Swindler Simon Leviev. And there is. I don’t think anyone out there is suggesting that lying about your height is the same as scamming innocent women out of  hundreds of thousands of pounds. But the culture of deception inherent in dating apps is how we ended up with the Tinder Swindler. 

Modern dating is, for lack of a better more delicate turn of phrase, a meat market. In any major city, anyone with a smartphone and an internet connection has access to the profiles of thousands and thousands of prospective suitors. And this takes a toll. You soon realise that you’re not just competing against people in your immediate vicinity, but you’re in a constantly-revolving digital slot machine alongside literal millionaires, humans with more abs than you’ve had hot dinners and those that have led more interesting and exciting lives than anyone you’ve ever met. 

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