UNC student looks for ‘Kim,’ the lady whom took her identity on Tinder

UNC student looks for ‘Kim,’ the lady whom took her identity on Tinder

Tinder doesn’t really do that much to guarantee users are whom they do say are.

Posted Apr 7, 2014 Updated Mar 2, 2020, 6:38 am CST

Despite its consistent assurances they say are that it cares deeply—deeply!—about user privacy, Tinder doesn’t actually do that much to ensure users are who. Essentially, all you’ve got to do in order to prove your identification is sign in through Twitter, choose a photos that are few your profile, and begin swiping.

Then when Kristin Shotwell, a 21-year-old pupil at University of vermont, unearthed that her pictures were published on a fake profile for a Tinder individual named “Kim,” what’s surprising isn’t plenty that her identification ended up being compromised, but that this type of thing does not take place more regularly when you look at the first place.

Relating to a post on the web log, Shotwell first discovered her pictures had been getting used for a fake Tinder profile when her buddies came back from a vacation from Athens, Ga. Continue reading “UNC student looks for ‘Kim,’ the lady whom took her identity on Tinder”