NEW YORK (AP) — The Federal Trade Commission is suing Match Group for allegedly using notifications about phony profiles to trick consumers into paying for a subscription to dating site Match.com
The site lets people create profiles for free but they need to pay for a subscription to respond to messages. Match sent emails to nonsubscribers telling them they had received a response on the site.
But the FTC said Wednesday that Match sent millions of emails about notices that came from accounts already flagged as likely fake.
Nearly 500,000 people between June 2016 and May 2018 subscribed to Match.com after receiving communications from fake profiles, the FTC said.