The scam of Woome.com and other dating sites on-line

Otto Jansen
  Some months ago the internet site Zoosk bought out Woome.com and the shameful practices this company did to its small user base in an order to deceive them into buying pricier membership. Robin Walters of Tech Crunch web site actually put out a picture of a horse on this web site and saw dozens of potential fake mates of supposedly women's active ads trying to contact him for this social site. The exposure of the practices used by Woome.com by tech Crunch lead to the fall of this shitty web company and instead of being fined and taken down, the people at Woome were bought out and rewarded by an undisclosed sum of money.
 Old users may remember  receiving a ton of unsolicited emails, direct messages, pop-ups, live chat sessions and alleged visits to my obviously fake profile by hot women and the company admitted that they made these to retain an active user base to deceive members and angel investors that their website was actually relevant.  Woome is not the only dating or social media site that uses this tactic and no doubt zoosk.com is still using this practice to deceive money out of lonely nerds desperate for female attention and interest in their mindless nights on the computer. All these dating sites lie about their female membership as announcing that ninety percent of their active users were male would only make homosexuals happy so they create all these fake people and profiles out of thin air and these people actually exist in real life as does Yeti. Most of these dating start ups actually don't want to be around for the following two years but instead hope to be bought out by a bigger rival or close up shop after collecting a good amount of jingle from foolish tech investors who think every start up has the potential to strike gold when instead most strike mold and are fraud.

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