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Tinder announced plans to roll out a feature that would scan users' camera rolls using AI to automatically select romance-series-sets-prime-video-release-date-drops-first-trail.html" class="story-link" title="‘Off Campus’ Hockey Romance Series Sets Prime Video Release Date; Drops First Tr">photos and determine their interests. The dating app says the feature will launch in the U.S. later this spring. The AI would access personal photo libraries to make recommendations about profile pictures and potentially identify user preferences.

This represents a significant expansion of AI into personal data mining, with a major dating platform proposing to scan users' private photo collections. Privacy advocates are concerned about the implications of giving apps broad access to kilmer-stars-in-new-movie-after-death.html" class="story-link" title="'We Can't Roll Camera Again. We Don't Have the Budget' — AI-Generated Val Kilmer">camera rolls, especially for sensitive personal data analysis.
Privacy advocates say

This feature represents an alarming overreach into personal privacy, giving Tinder unprecedented access to intimate personal photos and data. Users shouldn't have to surrender their entire camera roll to a dating app, especially one that could use AI to make inferences about their private lives beyond dating preferences.

Tinder says

The AI feature is designed to help users create better profiles by automatically selecting their best photos and understanding their interests. This will improve the user experience by streamlining profile creation and potentially leading to better matches through more accurate preference detection.