The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sharon Stone kicked off Bumble as a fake user, then reinstated

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Users swiping through the dating app Bumble were apparently suspicious when they came across a profile for the Golden Globewinni­ng actress Sharon Stone. The account was blocked after repeatedly being flagged as fake. Except it turned out to be real. “Hey @bumble, is being me exclusiona­ry?” the “Basic Instinct” star tweeted Monday after learning she’d been suspended. “Don’t shut me out of the hive.”

Within two hours of the tweet, Bumble had reinstated the account. “Looks like our users thought you were too good to be true, ”the company wrote to Stone on Twitter.

The mix-up demonstrat­es efforts matchmakin­g apps have taken to eradicate fake profiles, Bloomberg reported. They have faced increased scrutiny in recent months, with the Federal Trade Commission suing Match Group Inc. over allegation­s the matchmakin­g giant had used fraudulent profiles to trick people into using its services.

Stone apparently isn’t the only celebrity to be caught up in attempts to weed out fake profiles. The British singer Conor Maynard claimed that he was booted from the dating apps Tinder and Hinge due to suspicion his accounts were fraudulent.

“This happened to me on both @Tinder and @hinge . . . any help guys? ”he wrote, retweeting Stone’s tweet about her Bumble troubles.

Celebritie­s have their own dating app called Raya. It’s members-only and boasts such famous faces as Channing Tatum and John Mayer, The Cut reported.

Yet some still sign up for the dating apps and websites used by regular types.

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