Major Lawsuits
Hit Online Dating World
(datelists.com -
November 22, 2005) Two recent major lawsuits are threatening
to shake up the way online dating services operate. A lawsuit
filed against Match.com alleges that the company pays employees
to email prospective members and go out on dates. A separate
lawsuit, filed against Yahoo! Personals alleges that the company
has padded its membership database with fake profiles.
According to Joe Tracy, publisher
and editor of Online Dating Magazine, dating sites that allow
employees to use the service in any way, other than work, are
asking for trouble.
“Online dating services
should ban their employees from being able to participate,” Tracy
said on CNBC’s
On The Money program on Friday, November 18. “That’s
a conflict of interest. It’s not right.”
For its part, Match.com is
strongly denying the allegations that it pays employees to
date members. Match.com says it even has a signed affidavit
from the woman who the lawsuit accuses of being an employee
that says the woman is not employeed by them. According to
the lawsuit, the woman supposedly went out on dates with
Matthew Evans (the plaintiff in the
lawsuit) as a result of being hired by Match.com to do so.
"The suit apparently
was filed by Evans and his attorneys on the basis of no evidence
whatsoever and without any investigation of the facts as required
by federal law," said Kristin Kelly, spokeswoman for Match.com. "We
are exposing this suit for what it is -- a cynical attempt to
impugn the good name of Match.com, at the expense of the millions
of quality single people who have entrusted their emotional
futures to us. Rest assured that Match.com intends to fight
back against this totally baseless attack with all of our resources."
Yahoo! Personals has yet
to issue a statement on the lawsuit filed against it last
month. |