OPW — June 22 — OPW had a chat with Norah Hart, the attorney representing Sean McGinn, the 'cuddly but toned' man who filed a recent lawsuit against Match.com. This is the lawsuit that says Match.com misleads consumers about potential matches with inactive members. It is Hart’s assertion that “Match defrauds the consumer of their time and personal investment every time a person pays Match’s subscription fee and writes to a member who won’t have the ability to read what they wrote or see their profile.”
The one main thing that they seem to be pinning the case on is the fact that when you look at a profile, you cannot tell if a person is a subscriber or a free member. You also cannot tell how long its been since they’ve logged onto the site beyond three weeks. It is this practice that they want to go after Match.com for. Should they win, this would have a significant impact on every dating site that doesn’t list subscriber status or caps activity reporting on their members at three weeks or so.
Norah Hart contends that, “When a subscriber cancels their subscription, their profile continues to appear to be that of an active subscriber. Nothing indicates to the viewer their limited access to read e-mails or respond to them.”
The problem with this argument is that just because someone cancels their paid subscription to a site, it does not mean that they are canceling their membership. They might be paring back their involvement in the site because they are evaluating a new relationship. They may just be taking a month off the subscription because they want to save money. It also does not take into account winking, which is a free feature on Match for all members, regardless of paid status.
Internet dating is like fishing. Those with paid memberships just cast out further and more frequently. Those with idle unpaid memberships are waiting for the big fish. The question is, should the dating site identify the pro fishermen from the amateurs? I think the amateur fisherman would rather keep their hooks in the water. The fish, meanwhile, would want to see when someone last logged in. That's the best indicator of activity and the potential to respond. Still, is 3 weeks long enough? How about 3 months? Anyone who hasn't been active in 3 months would be very unlikely to respond.
Hart goes on to contend that her client is, “The perfect example of a man who is really attractive, extremely eligible and gainfully employed. He’s writing to people and hears nothing back from them. Is that because they’re not interested? That’s highly unlikely.”
What she isn’t taking into account is that there could be numerous factors contributing to his failure on the dating site. His photo, profile, what he says in his emails, and even his dating strategy could be letting him down.
As Hart is seeking a Jury trial, it will all come down to what the people decide and how strong Sean McGinn’s claims of anguish can sway them. Of course, the argument may be diluted by the fact that he did eventually find his girlfriend on match.com according to a recent report on Fox News.

“Of course, the argument may be diluted by the fact that he did eventually find his girlfriend on match.com according to a recent report on Fox News.”
Comedy Gold.
“Of course, the argument may be diluted by the fact that he did eventually find his girlfriend on match.com according to a recent report on Fox News.”
Comedy Gold.
Match needs a slap like this. Their “matches” engine sucks, it does not base its matches against your profile preferences, you get matches with people way out of your age range, or weight, or race or whatever.
Furthermore, their IM program (instant messaging) program is lousy. It does not work very well, nor does it tell you when the person you are attempting to talk to has logged off until the account goes idle.
Basically they are very sloppy in their programming and because their advertising campaign keeps bringing in fresh money, disgruntled customers have a min effect on them. Seeing them get held liable might get them to wake up and actually make a site that is worth the $ they charge to use it.
Match needs a slap like this. Their “matches” engine sucks, it does not base its matches against your profile preferences, you get matches with people way out of your age range, or weight, or race or whatever.
Furthermore, their IM program (instant messaging) program is lousy. It does not work very well, nor does it tell you when the person you are attempting to talk to has logged off until the account goes idle.
Basically they are very sloppy in their programming and because their advertising campaign keeps bringing in fresh money, disgruntled customers have a min effect on them. Seeing them get held liable might get them to wake up and actually make a site that is worth the $ they charge to use it.
It is about time someone put an end to this fraud. 3,000 miles is a “bit” far to my area. I quit Match.com 6 months ago, not only is my profile still up but my email box is full every day of men waiting for me to reply. Where do I sign up for this class action lawsuit? It is embarrassing and humillating knowing that someone is waiting for me to reply to an email I can’t read. What a waste of money and time!
It is about time someone put an end to this fraud. 3,000 miles is a “bit” far to my area. I quit Match.com 6 months ago, not only is my profile still up but my email box is full every day of men waiting for me to reply. Where do I sign up for this class action lawsuit? It is embarrassing and humillating knowing that someone is waiting for me to reply to an email I can’t read. What a waste of money and time!
You can read emails, you just can’t reply to them.
You can read emails, you just can’t reply to them.
You say “The problem with this argument is that just because someone cancels their paid subscription to a site, it does not mean that they are canceling their membership. They might be paring back their involvement in the site because they are evaluating a new relationship. They may just be taking a month off the subscription because they want to save money. It also does not take into account winking, which is a free feature on Match for all members, regardless of paid status.”
I can’t believe you wrote that since that’s exactly the heart of the lawsuit. If I write to a member who doesn’t have a paid subscription “FOR ANY REASON”(and I’m not aware of that fact) and they can’t write back to me that’s FRAUD in my book. All they have to do is state in a person’s profile that they are or are not a “paid member” period end of discussion. Let’s get that Class Action lawsuit going!!
You say “The problem with this argument is that just because someone cancels their paid subscription to a site, it does not mean that they are canceling their membership. They might be paring back their involvement in the site because they are evaluating a new relationship. They may just be taking a month off the subscription because they want to save money. It also does not take into account winking, which is a free feature on Match for all members, regardless of paid status.”
I can’t believe you wrote that since that’s exactly the heart of the lawsuit. If I write to a member who doesn’t have a paid subscription “FOR ANY REASON”(and I’m not aware of that fact) and they can’t write back to me that’s FRAUD in my book. All they have to do is state in a person’s profile that they are or are not a “paid member” period end of discussion. Let’s get that Class Action lawsuit going!!
Online dating Abuse
I need help. I met someone on match.com and went out with him for 5 months and things started getting serious when I found out that he was married, had kids and he had used all wrong information including a false first name, last name, a cell phone number which he disconnected when he realised I knew about him and the email address as well he disconnected. He erased his profile from the website. He is a computer genius and in real life owner of high profile montessori schools. I believe he has been doing this with several women over the years. I have been emotionally traumatised by this experience. He is a well respected member of his community and I want to know if anyone can tell me if there is any legal action that can be taken. Is there an organization or a women’s group which would work against this abuse. Any help will be highly appreciated!
Lisa
Online dating Abuse
I need help. I met someone on match.com and went out with him for 5 months and things started getting serious when I found out that he was married, had kids and he had used all wrong information including a false first name, last name, a cell phone number which he disconnected when he realised I knew about him and the email address as well he disconnected. He erased his profile from the website. He is a computer genius and in real life owner of high profile montessori schools. I believe he has been doing this with several women over the years. I have been emotionally traumatised by this experience. He is a well respected member of his community and I want to know if anyone can tell me if there is any legal action that can be taken. Is there an organization or a women’s group which would work against this abuse. Any help will be highly appreciated!
Lisa
After I resigned from match.com, giving the reason that I was not getting enough responses, I started to get a LOT more responses, including from people who had previously given me “no thanks” in response to winks. I think Match is almost entirely deceptive, and their “its OK to look” ad campaign encouraged infidelity. They play on the shame people feel at being un-paired to keep silent about their treatment. Look at it from a business perspective–they ONLY make money from people who are looking for someone to date, they don’t make ANY money from people who are happily paired. They want people to be dissatisfied and looking for a better and better, ideal person instead of developing a relationship with someone who is flawed but real.
After I resigned from match.com, giving the reason that I was not getting enough responses, I started to get a LOT more responses, including from people who had previously given me “no thanks” in response to winks. I think Match is almost entirely deceptive, and their “its OK to look” ad campaign encouraged infidelity. They play on the shame people feel at being un-paired to keep silent about their treatment. Look at it from a business perspective–they ONLY make money from people who are looking for someone to date, they don’t make ANY money from people who are happily paired. They want people to be dissatisfied and looking for a better and better, ideal person instead of developing a relationship with someone who is flawed but real.
Running across this information is quite interesting. Its now making a lot more sense to me. I have been getting very frustrated with the fact that men ONLY knew how to select the “wink” button. I had no idea that not members on this site are not paying members like myself. I got so frustrated that I changed my profile to read
“Okay this is it! Now I’m really going to put out there what I’m really looking for in a man that I may just spend the rest of my life with. A man who has no idea what an Eliptical machine is, ONLY knows how to use the “WINK” button, because what girl wants a man that can carry on a conversation? Not I!!! Oh must weigh over 250 lbs, under 5 feet, has no job or any income coming in, takes showers/baths only once a month, has not had a hair cut since Carter was in office, that is dating 4 girls at the same time, needs to know where I am every hour of the day because I will be bring in the income to take care of us. I will also cook every night for you because working 12 hours a day and bringing in the income is just not enough for me to feel that I am satisfying your manly needs. A man that drinks a 12pack of beer every night and I will bring it to you every night by the way. And I know match will approve my new profile because I paid for this service.”
I have a month and a half left and I was assuming that when my membership expires that my profile will automatically delete and no longer show up! So has anyone figured out how to officially delete the profile completely?
Running across this information is quite interesting. Its now making a lot more sense to me. I have been getting very frustrated with the fact that men ONLY knew how to select the “wink” button. I had no idea that not members on this site are not paying members like myself. I got so frustrated that I changed my profile to read
“Okay this is it! Now I’m really going to put out there what I’m really looking for in a man that I may just spend the rest of my life with. A man who has no idea what an Eliptical machine is, ONLY knows how to use the “WINK” button, because what girl wants a man that can carry on a conversation? Not I!!! Oh must weigh over 250 lbs, under 5 feet, has no job or any income coming in, takes showers/baths only once a month, has not had a hair cut since Carter was in office, that is dating 4 girls at the same time, needs to know where I am every hour of the day because I will be bring in the income to take care of us. I will also cook every night for you because working 12 hours a day and bringing in the income is just not enough for me to feel that I am satisfying your manly needs. A man that drinks a 12pack of beer every night and I will bring it to you every night by the way. And I know match will approve my new profile because I paid for this service.”
I have a month and a half left and I was assuming that when my membership expires that my profile will automatically delete and no longer show up! So has anyone figured out how to officially delete the profile completely?
I keep getting winks from people far away and way out of my age group. In a few days there is no profile available- is this some game Match plays to keep people subscribing again? Is that not unlawful?
I keep getting winks from people far away and way out of my age group. In a few days there is no profile available- is this some game Match plays to keep people subscribing again? Is that not unlawful?
I recently found out that my boyfriend of 4+ YEARS (marriage had been discussed) had an “Active” profile on Match.com that said “Active over 3 weeks.” Needless to say, this has put tremendous stress in our relationship, bringing it to the verge of a break up. Other than this single instance, I’ve never had a reason to not trust him. Reading these posts and others in other sites, I’m beginning to wonder if his is an old profile that Match.com just kept active. He says that MAYBE three years ago or so, he MAY have been fooling around with a guy friend and both went to the site. The twist is that the profile had (boyfriend has since taken it down) info that was relevant to where he has lived in the last three years (already more than a year into the relationship with me) and sports he didn’t practice until AFTER he had met me. He says he doesn’t know why he didn’t take it down and that he must have just simply forgotten about it. He swears he hasn’t visited the site in all the time we’ve been together looking for other women nor has he gone on dates or e-mailed others. For the record, I’m 41 and he’s almost 35, so we’re not “young and immature” (supodsely). What’s your take?
I recently found out that my boyfriend of 4+ YEARS (marriage had been discussed) had an “Active” profile on Match.com that said “Active over 3 weeks.” Needless to say, this has put tremendous stress in our relationship, bringing it to the verge of a break up. Other than this single instance, I’ve never had a reason to not trust him. Reading these posts and others in other sites, I’m beginning to wonder if his is an old profile that Match.com just kept active. He says that MAYBE three years ago or so, he MAY have been fooling around with a guy friend and both went to the site. The twist is that the profile had (boyfriend has since taken it down) info that was relevant to where he has lived in the last three years (already more than a year into the relationship with me) and sports he didn’t practice until AFTER he had met me. He says he doesn’t know why he didn’t take it down and that he must have just simply forgotten about it. He swears he hasn’t visited the site in all the time we’ve been together looking for other women nor has he gone on dates or e-mailed others. For the record, I’m 41 and he’s almost 35, so we’re not “young and immature” (supodsely). What’s your take?
I am upset because I haven’t been on the Match site for two months. I had a friend check my profile, and she told me it said I was active in the last 24 hours! I just don’t get that! She said that any time someone winks at me or any time I get billed, it can mean that I am “active.” (I am winked at several times a day and have 10 unread emails in my inbox at this time) Is this true about what my friend said? Well, that really is unfortunate. I am corresponding with someone I really like (long distance) and I guess this means that if he looks at my profile, it will look like I am on there every day. This is not very nice. I guess a lot of trust is expected with people. The beginning of relationships are so delicate. I just don’t know how many people are that strong.
I am upset because I haven’t been on the Match site for two months. I had a friend check my profile, and she told me it said I was active in the last 24 hours! I just don’t get that! She said that any time someone winks at me or any time I get billed, it can mean that I am “active.” (I am winked at several times a day and have 10 unread emails in my inbox at this time) Is this true about what my friend said? Well, that really is unfortunate. I am corresponding with someone I really like (long distance) and I guess this means that if he looks at my profile, it will look like I am on there every day. This is not very nice. I guess a lot of trust is expected with people. The beginning of relationships are so delicate. I just don’t know how many people are that strong.
RE; The “active within” timeframe when doing searches. I’ve been in a great “new” (just under 5 months) relationship when a friend told me my guy was online within 3 days on Match. I was hightly upset obviously!
Now, not only would he have to be a player which totally doesn’t seem in his character, but also lying about his computer crashing which he told me about days before this supposed online time (did he somehow guess that she would see this and call me?), and since we talk almost every night and spend some if not all our time together on weekends when would he find the time? I’ve met his friends and family and he’s taken me on cruises, out of town and made plans for an out of state weekend just 2 weeks after she called to say he’s supposedly on Match. Does NOT sound like the behavior of someone who’s “active” and looking for someone else does it? I asked him point blank and he just said “No Ma’am”, that he hasn’t been on since he cancelled his subscription a few weeks after we met, and states he doesn’t even remember his password.
The lawsuit states that even getting an email from Match to your registered Match email address also shows you as “active’. Now I hear that if someone sends a wink to a profile also triggers this. If all this is true, Match deserves to be sued. I am NOT the first person this has happened to and it’s really infuriating if they are making so many people believe lies about someone they care about. I’m going with my gut instinct and believing the human being instead of Match!
RE; The “active within” timeframe when doing searches. I’ve been in a great “new” (just under 5 months) relationship when a friend told me my guy was online within 3 days on Match. I was hightly upset obviously!
Now, not only would he have to be a player which totally doesn’t seem in his character, but also lying about his computer crashing which he told me about days before this supposed online time (did he somehow guess that she would see this and call me?), and since we talk almost every night and spend some if not all our time together on weekends when would he find the time? I’ve met his friends and family and he’s taken me on cruises, out of town and made plans for an out of state weekend just 2 weeks after she called to say he’s supposedly on Match. Does NOT sound like the behavior of someone who’s “active” and looking for someone else does it? I asked him point blank and he just said “No Ma’am”, that he hasn’t been on since he cancelled his subscription a few weeks after we met, and states he doesn’t even remember his password.
The lawsuit states that even getting an email from Match to your registered Match email address also shows you as “active’. Now I hear that if someone sends a wink to a profile also triggers this. If all this is true, Match deserves to be sued. I am NOT the first person this has happened to and it’s really infuriating if they are making so many people believe lies about someone they care about. I’m going with my gut instinct and believing the human being instead of Match!
Dear Jennifer – Take it from me…Believe your guy -not match.com!!! The same thing just happened to me. I have been seeing this guy for about 6 weeks. He is just awesome and a real gentlemen. I have been with some real idiots so my jerk radar is pretty good. He was at work and we had made plans for the weekend. I was excited and logged onto match just to look at his picture because I was acting like a school girl and wanted to see him because I could not be with him. Needless to say, I was very disappointed to see his profile say “online now.” I thought it strange because I knew he was teaching a class for his corporation that day. I purposely sent him an email through match saying I saw him online so I knew my email would get to him faster than a text. I told him to call me later if he wanted to make plans for the weekend. He left me a voicemail about an hour later that said, “Hey I just got done teaching and yes of course I want to see you this weekend. I just got your e-mail though match which is weird for an email from you to come through match. What is this about match showing me online now. I just got done teaching and haven’t been on that site in like 3 weeks.” You could tell in his voice he was a little agitated (not with me, but the site). My guy is just like yours, attentive, spends time with me whenever he can, talks about all aspects of his life, etc etc. Your post really helped me because I was real close to chucking a great guy because of STUPID MATCH! I think they are deceptive and keep people on the site to make it look like they have a lot of members for people to meet. Hang with your guy! I think it is match and not him! Take Care
Dear Jennifer – Take it from me…Believe your guy -not match.com!!! The same thing just happened to me. I have been seeing this guy for about 6 weeks. He is just awesome and a real gentlemen. I have been with some real idiots so my jerk radar is pretty good. He was at work and we had made plans for the weekend. I was excited and logged onto match just to look at his picture because I was acting like a school girl and wanted to see him because I could not be with him. Needless to say, I was very disappointed to see his profile say “online now.” I thought it strange because I knew he was teaching a class for his corporation that day. I purposely sent him an email through match saying I saw him online so I knew my email would get to him faster than a text. I told him to call me later if he wanted to make plans for the weekend. He left me a voicemail about an hour later that said, “Hey I just got done teaching and yes of course I want to see you this weekend. I just got your e-mail though match which is weird for an email from you to come through match. What is this about match showing me online now. I just got done teaching and haven’t been on that site in like 3 weeks.” You could tell in his voice he was a little agitated (not with me, but the site). My guy is just like yours, attentive, spends time with me whenever he can, talks about all aspects of his life, etc etc. Your post really helped me because I was real close to chucking a great guy because of STUPID MATCH! I think they are deceptive and keep people on the site to make it look like they have a lot of members for people to meet. Hang with your guy! I think it is match and not him! Take Care
Match is paired with Hotmail. So if you log on to your Hotmail email, it will show you as “online now”; it will not show you as “IM me”, because you are not logged in to Match. After you log off your personal email, it takes some time but will show you active within 1 hour (when you did not log on to Match). It seems that it will also show you as active if you open an email sent from Match to your personal email. Yahoo Personals will only show you as “online” when you are on your personal email; you have to actually click on something within an email to have it show you are active. It is deceiving and kinda scary that someone is able to tell you are currently online even when you are simply logged in to your personal email.
Match is paired with Hotmail. So if you log on to your Hotmail email, it will show you as “online now”; it will not show you as “IM me”, because you are not logged in to Match. After you log off your personal email, it takes some time but will show you active within 1 hour (when you did not log on to Match). It seems that it will also show you as active if you open an email sent from Match to your personal email. Yahoo Personals will only show you as “online” when you are on your personal email; you have to actually click on something within an email to have it show you are active. It is deceiving and kinda scary that someone is able to tell you are currently online even when you are simply logged in to your personal email.
get a life and grow up. Things like this happen every day. Deal with it.
get a life and grow up. Things like this happen every day. Deal with it.
I have a question for anyone that may know. I met someone on Match about 10 months ago. We have had a ups and downs but just last week I noticed that his profile was back out on Match. Not only did we cancel our memberships we went into our profile and click on Hide Profile Now. In the past 10 months I would periodically check his profile to see that it was still unhidden which is was. But last week it appeared back out there. When I approached him with this he said that he had a problem a year where Match apparently unhid his profile leaving it out there for viewing. Does anyone know if Match does this?? Will they take a hidden profile and unhide it??
I have a question for anyone that may know. I met someone on Match about 10 months ago. We have had a ups and downs but just last week I noticed that his profile was back out on Match. Not only did we cancel our memberships we went into our profile and click on Hide Profile Now. In the past 10 months I would periodically check his profile to see that it was still unhidden which is was. But last week it appeared back out there. When I approached him with this he said that he had a problem a year where Match apparently unhid his profile leaving it out there for viewing. Does anyone know if Match does this?? Will they take a hidden profile and unhide it??
Sorry Anne, he is not being honest with you. Match does do some shady stuff. But, after the guy i met on there and dated for nearly 4 years proved to be addicted to “checking out his new matches,” our relationship was doomed. It always says he was active because when he received his weekly matches, even though not a currently paying member, he would open to email and look at the girls. So maybe people are not logging into match, but they still receive matches and continue to view them. My guy was a scum bag, which isn’t the norm, but men just looove to look, so thats typically what is going on.
Sorry Anne, he is not being honest with you. Match does do some shady stuff. But, after the guy i met on there and dated for nearly 4 years proved to be addicted to “checking out his new matches,” our relationship was doomed. It always says he was active because when he received his weekly matches, even though not a currently paying member, he would open to email and look at the girls. So maybe people are not logging into match, but they still receive matches and continue to view them. My guy was a scum bag, which isn’t the norm, but men just looove to look, so thats typically what is going on.
So I’m hearing that the mere click to open an email from Match apparently sends a message to their server to change a user’s status to “online now”. Does anyone by chance know if the mere act of DELETING a Match email will also cause a user’s status to change to “online now”? For instance, let’s say a person no longer actively uses the service, yet they could simply be deleting unwanted emails received from Match (i.e. daily mutual matches, other Match.com tips and offers, etc.) and yet their status gets updated to being active/online?? It sounds like a number of people could be spared a great deal of emotional distress if only they knew about Match’s deceptive manipulation of activity status to give the impression that a member is “online” and “actively looking” when that couldn’t be further from the truth. It would certainly be ironic if just deleting a Match email would trigger one’s activity status to say “online now”…
So I’m hearing that the mere click to open an email from Match apparently sends a message to their server to change a user’s status to “online now”. Does anyone by chance know if the mere act of DELETING a Match email will also cause a user’s status to change to “online now”? For instance, let’s say a person no longer actively uses the service, yet they could simply be deleting unwanted emails received from Match (i.e. daily mutual matches, other Match.com tips and offers, etc.) and yet their status gets updated to being active/online?? It sounds like a number of people could be spared a great deal of emotional distress if only they knew about Match’s deceptive manipulation of activity status to give the impression that a member is “online” and “actively looking” when that couldn’t be further from the truth. It would certainly be ironic if just deleting a Match email would trigger one’s activity status to say “online now”…
Well I’m no expert in HTML coding and stuff, but from what I’ve researched, those graphic images that some marketers (including sites like Match.com) like to use in their emails are called “web beacons”, or “web bugs”, and those are the elements that cause the server to record the fact that the image was called up at the time the email is opened. And it probably only works when a person’s email client is set to display emails in HTML format. So my guess is, an email would have to be opened for a match profile status to be updated to “active”. If an email is simply deleted, then the web beacon embedded in the email won’t be activated, so no “message” can be sent to the server. So if a person hasn’t opened (or is simply deleting without opening) a web-bugged email, the server/marketer will at the very least know that their emails are not being opened/read.
Well I’m no expert in HTML coding and stuff, but from what I’ve researched, those graphic images that some marketers (including sites like Match.com) like to use in their emails are called “web beacons”, or “web bugs”, and those are the elements that cause the server to record the fact that the image was called up at the time the email is opened. And it probably only works when a person’s email client is set to display emails in HTML format. So my guess is, an email would have to be opened for a match profile status to be updated to “active”. If an email is simply deleted, then the web beacon embedded in the email won’t be activated, so no “message” can be sent to the server. So if a person hasn’t opened (or is simply deleting without opening) a web-bugged email, the server/marketer will at the very least know that their emails are not being opened/read.
My take on what ‘Match’ is doing – Hiring people to create fake profiles, set parameters to sort out match types, send them ‘Winks’, direct them to another website “*****blue@yahoo.com” and perpetrate the fraud asking for money to be wired. I have used reverse ip address trackers for each of my fraudulent contacts and have traced them across the country (mostly in Tn and AK). They have very elaborate techniques to show authenticity of their devious plots. Personally, I have had 3 fraudulent matches and 3 legitimate matches (I met them in person!) I have made copies of all the transpired communication between me and the fake persons involved. I am looking for contact information for joining the Class Action Lawsuits, or I may wind up start my own lawsuit. I most definitely want my money back! Perhaps a Small Claims suit, where treble damages judgment may result. The last time I checked, soliciting for money, by fraudulent means is illegal! Any referral will be appreciated. Thank you. Sheryl C.
My take on what ‘Match’ is doing – Hiring people to create fake profiles, set parameters to sort out match types, send them ‘Winks’, direct them to another website “*****blue@yahoo.com” and perpetrate the fraud asking for money to be wired. I have used reverse ip address trackers for each of my fraudulent contacts and have traced them across the country (mostly in Tn and AK). They have very elaborate techniques to show authenticity of their devious plots. Personally, I have had 3 fraudulent matches and 3 legitimate matches (I met them in person!) I have made copies of all the transpired communication between me and the fake persons involved. I am looking for contact information for joining the Class Action Lawsuits, or I may wind up start my own lawsuit. I most definitely want my money back! Perhaps a Small Claims suit, where treble damages judgment may result. The last time I checked, soliciting for money, by fraudulent means is illegal! Any referral will be appreciated. Thank you. Sheryl C.
I total agree
I total agree