I think the truth is that dating is considered optional nowadays, which makes it more competitive both offline and online. People have minimum standards and if they can't find someone that matches these standards they can always stay single.
I personally don't believe in online dating, because the business model just doesn't work for me. Most dating apps are built for singles and once you find a long term relationship you cease using the app. An online dating company can only make money off of casual dating and perpetual singles. A "real" dating app should still provide value years into a relationship, otherwise there will always be a conflict of interest.
By de-normalizing offline dating and removing participants from the offline dating pool.
> Unless you're young and in the LGB group most people find their partners offline.
In Australia, online dating is the single most common way that people meet their partners and it's not close (35% online, 21% through friends, 13% at work).[0] I would be surprised if this is dramatically different from other Anglosphere countries.
I don't like online dating because of how completely inefficient it is, but it's hard not to believe in it when it's becoming the de-facto way people pair up.
[0] https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-11-26/australia-talks-natio...
Read Houellebecq or any dating advice forum, for arguments on how excess choice enabled by apps makes dating less egalitarian and ruins it for the “weaker” section.
As for Houellebecq, his books are mostly about how gen X dudes feel empty inside - the crude prose and extremely plain writing style make for an interesting couple of books but there's very little beyond it. He also somehow makes the argument that men would be somehow less frustrated in places where people have less agency in their dating choices, which is an interesting, if unproved assertion - it would be nice if any citizens of the Islamic Republic of Iran, or Algeria, or Pakistan on HN could chime in and say if they agree with it.
Do you think users are more interested in ARPDAU or love/sex?
Tinder-style profile-based match dating (which is basically all dating apps at this point) is bad at getting users love/sex but great at maximizing ARPDAU.
Dating apps which are good at getting users love/sex but have bad ARPDAU struggle to attract investment and either shut down or pivot to user-hostile design to save the business.
Blame the users, sure.
It's not just the "weaker" section who hate the online dating experience, either.
Reducing sexual encounters to normalizing consent forms is pretty ridiculous. A few creeps ruined it for all of us
I am a man and if a woman asked me to sign something prior to sex I would leave
But beyond that, half of US adults are over 38, so likely many of these aren't dating even if they aren't married.
So seems obvious that fewer than half of US adults are dating at all, and obviously the only a proportion of that group will have also been dating ten years ago, as they won't be that old, or will have been previously married.
So how can half of all adults have an informed opinion on this?
Men, after aging for the last 10 years: "No, it hasn't gotten harder."
Women, after aging for the last 10 years: "Yes, it has gotten harder."
The article is not long. Please don't make unfounded claims that are directly refuted by the article we're supposed to be discussing.