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In addition to the payment, Match Group has agreed to changes including more clearly disclosing terms for its "six-month ...
The owners of online dating services such as Match.com and Tinder agreed to permanently stop deceptive advertising, ...
Match Group has agreed to pay $14 million to the FTC. The payment will settle charges of deceptive advertising practices.
Match Group will pay $14 million and stop misleading users about dating guarantees after FTC charges. Company must simplify ...
Match Group will pay $14 million and implement clear guarantee disclosures, easy cancellations, and fair billing practices under an FTC settlement resolving deceptive practice allegations.
The dating app behemoth will pay $14 million to settle deceptive advertising charges. It's a relatively paltry sum, but the ...
A 2019 lawsuit from the FTC claimed Match.com promised a free six-month subscription to customers who didn’t “meet someone special” without disclosing the “onerous requirements” needed to fulfill this ...
Match Group was one of the best-performing stocks in the S&P 500 Wednesday, a day after the parent company of Tinder and ...
Match Group not only owns the namesake Match.com, but a portfolio of leading online dating sites including Tinder, Hinge, Meetic, OkCupid, Pairs, Plenty Of Fish, Azar, BLK, Hakuna, and others.
Match Group wants a do-over The Tinder parent posted another underwhelming round of results with revenue falling 3% to $831.2 million, though that was ahead of the consensus at $827.4 million.
Match Group's (NASDAQ: MTCH) stock price dropped 5% on Feb. 1, following its fourth-quarter earnings report. The online-dating leader's revenue declined 2% year over year (but rose 5% in currency ...