Reagan.com Email Now Only 94 Million or So Users Away From Passing Yahoo
The online dating sites Match.com and OkCupid can now add another happy couple to their list of successful matches: themselves.
IAC's
Match.com, which owns a family of dating sites including Chemistry.com,
People Media, and SinglesNet, purchased OkCupid for $50 million on
Wednesday. Unlike the subscriber-only Match.com, OkCupid offers its
services for free, supports itself through advertising, and generally
attracts younger singles who connect with the site's hip, Digital Age ethos.
What does the corporate marriage mean for the future of online dating?
If you've ever gone fishing for a mate online, you know that Match.com is like the McDonald's of online dating sites. It's completely generic. EVERYONE is on it ... Because of the crowds, good-looking, normal gals must contend with an onslaught of men, 90 percent of whom are total freaks/nerds/players/weirdos.
OkCupid ... Yeah, in my past experience--it's pretty much the same, except free (and therefore even more skeezy) ... And now that [Match.com and OkCupid are] converging on one another in a hot, sticky mess of online dating site co-promotion ... well, it's just going to be even more chaotic for serious daters.
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Uri Friedman
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