In a piece for The Guardian, Puportail discovered that Tinder remembers every time she's used the app, every match, every conversation, and other sensitive information, even Facebook likes and Instagram photos. "The dating app has 800 pages of information on me, and probably on you too if you are also one of its 50 million users," she wrote.
Puportail admitted that scrolling through the information made her feel guilty. "I was amazed by how much information I was voluntarily disclosing: from locations, interests and jobs, to pictures, music tastes and what I liked to eat," she wrote.
And while the company's policy states that data may be used by others mainly to deliver targeted advertising, Puportail asked what would happen if this "treasure trove of data" were "hacked…made public or simply bought by another company?"
The company's privacy policy, which says "you should not expect your personal information, chats, or other communications will always remain secure," is not exactly reassuring, she added.
The app appears in the news regularly in connection to one scandal or another. Earlier this month, Swedish media reported that gang members were posing as women to rob their Tinder 'dates'. Earlier this year, a US non-profit research center warned that the number of women being harassed online via dating apps including Tinder is on the rise globally. Psychologists and researchers have also warned that in spite of the broad availability of dating and hookup apps like Tinder, Americans are actually having less sex today than they were 20 years ago.