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The owners of online dating services such as Match.com and Tinder agreed to permanently stop deceptive advertising, ...
Match Group has agreed to pay $14 million to the FTC. The payment will settle charges of deceptive advertising practices.
Match Group will pay $14 million and implement clear guarantee disclosures, easy cancellations, and fair billing practices under an FTC settlement resolving deceptive practice allegations.
Match Group will pay $14 million and stop misleading users about dating guarantees after FTC charges. Company must simplify ...
The dating app behemoth will pay $14 million to settle deceptive advertising charges. It's a relatively paltry sum, but the ...
If you are a Match.com user, you will want to be aware that the FTC recently announced that “Match Group, Inc., and Match Group, LLC (Match), the owners and operators of online dating services ...
A 2019 lawsuit from the FTC claimed Match.com promised a free six-month subscription to customers who didn’t “meet someone special” without disclosing the “onerous requirements” needed to fulfill this ...
Match Group was one of the best-performing stocks in the S&P 500 Wednesday, a day after the parent company of Tinder and ...
Tinder-parent Match Group's second-quarter revenue surpassed Wall Street expectations on Tuesday, buoyed by strong ...
Match Group not only owns the namesake Match.com, but a portfolio of leading online dating sites including Tinder, Hinge, Meetic, OkCupid, Pairs, Plenty Of Fish, Azar, BLK, Hakuna, and others.
Match Group's (NASDAQ: MTCH) stock price dropped 5% on Feb. 1, following its fourth-quarter earnings report. The online-dating leader's revenue declined 2% year over year (but rose 5% in currency ...
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