Los Angeles Times

Grindr alters its policy on personal data

After outcry, the gay dating app will stop sharing users’ HIV status with outside vendors, a source says.

- By David Pierson david.pierson@latimes.com

Gay dating app Grindr will stop sharing users’ HIV status with third parties after a report disclosed that the company had passed the informatio­n on to two vendors.

The West Hollywood company’s policy change came after a BuzzFeed report Monday that said personal data was being passed to two outside vendors hired by Grindr to test the performanc­e of its app.

The report comes at a time of heightened anxiety about digital privacy because of the data misappropr­iation scandal involving Cambridge Analytica, a political consulting firm that received unauthoriz­ed data from millions of Facebook users through an outside app developer.

Grindr’s vendors, Apptimize and Localytics, are fed user data including HIV status, GPS data, phone numbers and email addresses that, when combined, could expose someone’s private health informatio­n, researcher­s told BuzzFeed.

In response to an outcry Monday, Grindr will stop sharing users’ HIV status to outside vendors, according to someone close to the company who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The policy change was first reported by Axios.

In a separate statement Monday, Grindr said it would never sell personally identifiab­le informatio­n to third parties, including advertiser­s. Apptimize and Localytics — services that help Grindr test features on its platform — are under contract to safeguard user privacy and security, the company said.

“As a company that serves the LGBTQ community, we understand the sensitivit­ies around HIV status disclosure,” said Scott Chen, Grindr’s chief technology officer. “Our goal is and always has been to support the health and safety of our users worldwide.”

Chen said Grindr, which has more than 3 million users, shares personal informatio­n only when necessary or appropriat­e.

“Sometimes this data may include location data or data from HIV status fields as these are features within Grindr,” Chen said. “However, this informatio­n is always transmitte­d securely with encryption, and there are data retention policies in place to further protect our users’ privacy from disclosure.”

Grindr allows its users to choose from a number of options under “HIV Status,” including listing positive, negative or receiving treatment. It also allows users to list their latest HIV test date. That informatio­n is aimed at informing potential sexual partners, the company says.

Grindr helped pioneer a fast and location-specific approach to dating that lets users quickly vet prospectiv­e partners who are nearby. Since its launch in 2009, Grindr has expanded from a hookup app to a broader digital platform advocating for LGBTQ issues.

Grindr sold a majority stake of its company last year to Kunlun Group Limited, a Chinese gaming company. Grindr’s founder, Joel Simkhai, stepped down as chief executive after Kunlun bought the remaining stake in the company in January.

Gay men’s HIV status remains highly sensitive because of a history of discrimina­tion, said John Duran, a longtime HIV/AIDS activist who is West Hollywood’s mayor pro tem.

Duran said large cities such as Los Angeles have better access to treatment and education about HIV. But outside major urban centers, the stigma for HIVpositiv­e people can be much worse.

“Go 20 miles inland and you have to start HIV 101 all over again,” Duran said. “Sharing someone’s status is very egregious to me. It’s a breach of privacy.”

Data collection has become a much more controvers­ial subject in recent weeks after revelation­s that 50 million unwitting Facebook users had some of their personal informatio­n leaked to Cambridge Analytica, a British company hired by the Trump campaign to sway voter opinion.

Localytics said it does not share Grindr user informatio­n with third parties.

“We do not share, or disclose, our customers’ data,” Bryan Dunn, vice president of product for Localytics, said in a statement Monday.

Apptimize did not respond to a request for comment.

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