Coffee Meets Bagel Co-Founder Dishes on New Video Feature
In-person dating has become increasingly difficult, even though the market is saturated with digital dating apps.
Still, a Coffee Meets Bagel co-founder says that dating apps are not equipped to create genuine connections. Dawoon Kang told Cheddar that her dating site’s latest video feature may have the Midas Touch.
“Video is a tool that we are using to enable our users to share about themselves in a fun, playful way,” she said. “People are not experiencing real connections on the app.”
While Kang argues that some online daters aren’t that into these types of services, Pew Research reported that more people are using apps to find love. A 2016 report says that 41 percent of Americans know someone who dates online; and 29 percent know someone who has met a spouse or long-term partner digitally.
The company swears by video to create a greater impact on its users. After testing the new feature, which presents subscribers with a daily question they would answer via video, Coffee Meets Bagel reported that 37 percent of participants were “taken” by other users.
“We really want to have Coffee Meets Bagel to become a platform for real connections,” she said. “That starts with authentic sharing.”
Mastercards's Chief Technology Officer Ed McLaughlin shows Cheddar News Senior Reporter Michelle Castillo what shoppers can expect in shopping technology.
Almost a week after the Apple faithful collectively gasped at the first evidence that the iPhone’s red “end call” button might soon be vacating its center position to take up residence one column to the right, it looks like it might have been mostly a false alarm.
Meta is under scrutiny for the way it has moderated reproductive health content. Women's health advocates say the social media giant has allowed male health content to flow more freely than content geared toward women and gender diversity.
The vote by the state's Public Utilities Commission came despite reservations from city officials and residents spurred by erratic behavior that resulted in unmanned vehicles blocking traffic, including the path of emergency vehicles.
Practically overnight, ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence chatbots have become the go-to source for cheating in college. Now, educators are rethinking how they’ll teach courses this fall from Writing 101 to computer science.