Dating app Bumble bans body-shaming

28 January 2021, 12:44

A woman looks at the Bumble app on a smartphone
Dating app Bumble bans body shaming. Picture: PA

A survey suggests one in four Britons has been body-shamed online via a dating app or on social media.

Dating app Bumble is banning body-shaming from its platform in a bid to create a kinder and more respectful experience for users.

Under the firm’s updated rules, unsolicited and derogatory comments made about someone’s appearance, body shape, size or health are explicitly disallowed, including language considered fat-phobic, ableist, racist, colourist, homophobic or transphobic.

It came as almost a quarter (23%) of Britons said they have been body-shamed online via a dating app or social media, according to a Bumble survey of 1,003 adults.

The app – which gives women the power to choose who they want to talk to – will scan for offending material within profiles.

Automated technology will also be used to detect comments or images that breach the new guidelines within the chat function, before being sent to a human moderator to review.

First-time offenders will be given an initial warning as well as advice on their behaviour, but repeated incidents will lead to the person being permanently removed, the company said.

Naomi Walkland, Bumble’s head of UK and Ireland, said: “At Bumble, we have always been clear on our mission to create a kinder, more respectful and more equal space on the internet. Key to this has always been our zero-tolerance policy for racist and hate-driven speech, abusive behaviour and harassment.

“We believe in being explicit when it comes to the kind of behaviour that is not welcome on our app and, with these changes, we’re making it clear that body-shaming is not acceptable on Bumble.

“We always want to lead with education and give our community a chance to learn to recognise this language and improve.

“However, we will not hesitate to permanently remove someone from the app if there are repeated incidents or particularly harmful comments.”

A wider survey of 14,571 Bumble users from the UK, the US, Canada, Australia and India reported that 71% feel people are more likely to make unsolicited comments online.

Almost nine in 10 (87%) feel that dating is an area where you feel more physically judged than other areas of life.

Bumble has also revealed that it is reviewing its photo moderation policy. In 2016, the firm banned shirtless bathroom mirror selfies and indoor photos in swimsuits and bras.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman

Sam Altman reiterates OpenAI ‘not for sale’ after Elon Musk-led bid

A young girl uses the TikTok app on a smartphone.

Data of dead British children may have been deleted, TikTok boss says

Elon Musk

Elon Musk offers $97bn to buy ChatGPT-maker OpenAI

Alesha Dixon (Jordan Pettitt/PA)

Alesha Dixon working ‘super hard’ to stop children having phones

A quarter of those who have fallen victim say they blamed themselves (PA)

Almost half of children aged between eight and 17 ‘have been scammed online’

Samaritans said the Act does not go far enough (PA)

Online Safety Act ‘missing vital opportunity’ on suicide content

Former prime minister Rishi Sunak with Sam Altman

OpenAI boss Sam Altman says DeepSeek did ‘nice work’ with AI chatbot

Georgia Harrison outside Chelmsford Crown Court where Stephen Bear was appearing in December 2022

Georgia Harrison continuing to ‘struggle’ with online spread of revenge porn

France AI Summit

‘Long live AI’: Macron pitches France as place to build AI over UK and US

Man on a smartphone walks down some stairs past a line up of different flags

Google and OpenAI back new online safety tools to combat child sexual abuse

Guests including Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Sundar Pichai and Elon Musk, arrive before the 60th Presidential Inauguration in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington

No plans to water down Online Safety Act in exchange for tariff deal – minister

The TikTok logo is seen on a smartphone screen on top of a keyboard

TikTok ban ‘on official devices remains’ as Government launches account

People withdrawing cash at a Barclays ATM machine

MPs quiz bank bosses over scale of IT failures after Barclays outage

Science, Innovation and Technology Secretary Peter Kyle

AI used to speed up planning applications and benefits claims, records reveal

Nick Lees

Man who credits King over cancer diagnosis given pioneering robotic microsurgery

A laptop user holding a bank card

People warned to ‘be alert’ to threats of online fraud