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Bumble

Bumble is a mobile app for online dating and social networking. It was founded by Whitney Wolfe Herd and was launched in December 2014. Bumble is operated by Bumble Inc., which also owns Badoo.

History
The Bumble app was founded by Whitney Wolfe Herd, shortly after she left Tinder, and Andrey Andreev, founder of Badoo. The app was launched in December 2014. It used infrastructure in Badoo's London headquarters. In March 2017, Bumble had more than 800 million matches and 10 billion swipes per month and was the second most popular Lifestyle app in the Apple App Store. By July 2020, Bumble had been downloaded over 100 million times. Bumble offers free courses from Bloom, an online provider of support for sexual assault survivors. Herd announced she was stepping down as Bumble's CEO in January 2024, and the former Slack CEO, Lidiane Jones, would assume the role. Herd remained with Bumble as executive chair until March 2025, when she returned to the CEO position. On 28 January 2026, it was revealed that Bumble was hit by cyberattacks, but said the intruders did not get into the member database, accounts, direct messages, or profiles. In 2026, Bumble announced that it is preparing to launch signed version of the app, enhancing the traditional swipe interface with a chapter-based structure. == Operation ==
Operation
Matching users Users swipe right to "like" a potential match and left to reject them. In matches between a man and a woman, the woman must initiate the conversation with their match or the matches disappear within 24 hours unless the woman has set an opening question, to which the man can respond. In a same-sex match, either person can reach out first or set an opening question. In 2024, this system was changed so that women no longer have to make the first move during matches. Users can sort conversations, make calls, and send photo messages. Through BFF mode, introduced in March 2016, users can match with platonic friends of the same sex, in the same way as matching for dates. If a user is messaged after matching with a potential partner and does not respond within 24 hours, the match disappears; this requirement was implemented in April 2016 to combat ghosting. Before the update, men were allowed unlimited time to respond to a message from women. An update was also launched for same-sex matches, with either party allowed to initiate and the other having to respond within 24 hours. Over time, the app introduced a wider range of gender identity options for users to identify as genderqueer or transgender. In August 2024, 61% of Bumble users were men and 37% of users were female. In August 2024, Bumble began developing a chatbot to act as a wingman and help users with flirting. Content moderation Starting in October 2016, the app banned mirror selfies, obscured faces, and photos of users in underwear among others. In August 2017, Bumble partnered with the Anti-Defamation League to remove users who display hate speech or symbols in their profiles. In March 2018, Bumble banned photos of users posing with guns following the Parkland high school shooting. In 2023, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism found that many content moderators working for Bumble suffered from mental health issues, including anxiety, depression, and PTSD associated with their work, with concerns about professional mental health support, productivity targets, and understaffing. Fake profiles and photos using artificial intelligence are prohibited and may be reported. In April 2019, Bumble launched Private Detector, an image classifier that uses artificial intelligence to automatically detect and blur nude images. It allows users to decide if they want to view, block or report the unsolicited image. Bumble made the tool open source in October 2022. That March, Bumble collaborated with Phaedra Parks, Parvati Shallow and Peter Weber of the Peacock reality show The Traitors to launch the feature. User verification Originally, Bumble users were required to log in via Facebook when signing up. Following the Facebook–Cambridge Analytica data scandal, Bumble added an option to sign up using only a phone number. For users who sign up with Facebook, information from their account is used to build a profile with photos and basic information, including the user's college and job. Bumble was the first dating app to include photo verification in the US. In 2025, the app also included an option to become ID-verified. Filters In 2020, Bumble announced a temporary feature that allowed users to expand their distance filters to match with anyone in the same country. Previously, the app only allowed people to connect within a range. Daters could also add a "virtual dating" badge to their profile to indicate that they are willing to date over video calls. On January 15, 2021, Bumble temporarily suspended the option to filter matches by political preference to "prevent misuse". The move came after several women allegedly used Bumble to gather information from people involved in the January 6 United States Capitol attack, and then forwarded that information to the FBI. Bumble was criticized by many of its users for being perceived to "protect terrorists" by suspending the filter. Bumble announced that it would be reinstating the option to filter by political preferences later that day. Paid features In August 2016, Bumble introduced paid features including Beeline, a list of users who have liked the user; Rematch, which keeps expired matches in a user's queue for 24 additional hours; and Extend, which allows users unlimited 24-hour extensions for matches. Other features In June 2016, the app began allowing users to connect their Spotify accounts to their Bumble profiles to show their music interests. In 2017, the company launched a career networking app, Bumble Bizz. In June 2019, Bumble introduced in-app voice and video calls. Bumble's vice president of strategy reported "an 84 percent increase in video calls that were placed between users" during the COVID-19 pandemic. Another feature allows women to share details about their dates, including: who they’re meeting, and the time and location of the meeting, with a contact for safety reasons. Security vulnerabilities In June 2021, Stripe software engineer Robert Heaton found a security vulnerability in Bumble that allows an attacker to obtain the exact location of its users via trilateration. Bumble fixed the vulnerability three days later and paid Heaton a bug bounty of $2,000. In August 2024, researchers at KU Leuven in Belgium found that several dating apps, including Bumble, had vulnerabilities that would allow bad actors to obtain users' locations via trilateration. ==Advocacy==
Advocacy
Cyberflashing Bumble was the first dating app to explicitly moderate for unsolicited nude images, known as cyberflashing. In 2019, the app launched Private Detector, a feature that uses artificial intelligence to automatically detect and blur nude images. Bumble influenced Virginia to pass Senate Bill 493, which prescribes civil penalties for an adult who knowingly sends another adult sexually explicit images without their consent in April 2022. Bumble launched the #CyberFlashingIsFlashing ad campaign in the UK to support the Online Safety Act 2023, which was passed in March 2022. In 2024, Bumble backed the CONSENT Act, a federal bill which "aims to provide protection for recipients of sexually explicit images, including images manipulated by artificial intelligence or machine learning." Reproductive rights Bumble led an amicus brief in both Zurawski v. State of Texas (2023) and Moyle v. United States (2024), arguing in favor of reproductive rights. == Reception ==
Reception
Feminist label Bumble has been described as a "feminist Tinder". Its founder has confirmed this identity, calling the app "100 percent feminist," although she has attempted to distance the app from Tinder in interviews. Wolfe Herd shared in an interview with Vanity Fair the concept behind the app: "If you look at where we are in the current heteronormative rules surrounding dating, the unwritten rule puts the woman a peg under the man—the man feels the pressure to go first in a conversation, and the woman feels pressure to sit on her hands... If we can take some of the pressure off the man and put some of that encouragement in the woman's lap, I think we are taking a step in the right direction, especially in terms of really being true to feminism. I think we are the first feminist or first attempt at a feminist dating app." In August 2017, the neo-Nazi website The Daily Stormer encouraged its readers to harass Bumble's staff to protest the company's support of women's empowerment. In August 2018, Bumble launched the Bumble Fund to support women-led startups. Following the testimony of Christine Blasey Ford against Brett Kavanaugh, Bumble ran the “Believe Women” ad campaign and donated to RAINN. Bumble launched a three-year partnership with the National Domestic Violence Hotline in 2020. In September 2021, Bumble set up a relief fund for those affected by the Texas Heartbeat Act. In response to the decision in ''Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade'', Bumble made additional donations to the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas and Planned Parenthood. In February 2023, writer Sangeeta Singh-Kurtz wrote that "it often seems like that feminist twist is more marketing fodder than meaningful change to how our apps run our love lives." In June 2020, an undisclosed settlement was reached between Match Group and Bumble to settle all litigations. In 2020, Bumble agreed to pay $22.5 million in a settlement over plaintiffs' claims that the company's auto-renewal processes were unfair and that it charged consumers without their consent. Anti-celibacy advertising In May 2024, Bumble faced major backlash after launching a marketing campaign that entailed putting up billboards with captions such as: "You know full well a vow of celibacy is not the answer". Users accused the campaign of shaming women who were not sexually active. Bumble responded with a public apology, wherein the company said it would remove the ads and donate to the National Domestic Violence Hotline. ==See also==
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