THE GLOBE AND MAIL – Sep 18 - Mobile dating apps such as Skout and Are You Interested let users download software onto their phones that alerts them when a potential match is within a few hundred metres. The pioneer of GPS dating was Lovegety, which originated in Japan in 1998 and notified users if a match was nearby by vibrating their cellphones. Lovegety inspired Bluedating, spontaneous matchmaking via Bluetooth. Soon after came “geosocial” networking services such as Loopt and Brightkite.com, which allow people to keep track of friends and explore social communities around their favourite venues. Even though the apps are all explicitly opt-in, they've raised safety concerns. With stalker risks in mind, most will only reveal the distance between users, not their exact location. They also let users block others if they become pesky.
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Mark Brooks: It will take a major iDating site to integrate LBS before Location Based Dating will really take off.

Location-based dating is only good for major metro areas. Regardless of safety measures in place, the majority of singles are concerned about people knowing there general location, let along exactly where they are.
This is a 20-something feature, sites catering to the younger generation will implement this first, no large dating site is going to touch it for quite some time.
Location-based dating is only good for major metro areas. Regardless of safety measures in place, the majority of singles are concerned about people knowing there general location, let along exactly where they are.
This is a 20-something feature, sites catering to the younger generation will implement this first, no large dating site is going to touch it for quite some time.