Man Sticks Dick in Crazy; Blames Grindr

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http://money.cnn.com/2017/04/14/technology/grindr-lawsuit/

1,100 strangers showed up at his home for sex. He blames Grindr
By Sara Ashley O'Brien April 14, 2017: 1:02 PM ET


Over the past five months, Matthew Herrick says that 1,100 men have showed up at his home and workplace expecting to have sex with him. Herrick is suing Grindr, the popular dating app for gay and bisexual men, because of it.

According to the complaint, Herrick, 32, is the victim of an elaborate revenge scheme that's playing out on Grindr's platform. An ex-boyfriend of Herrick's, who he says he met on Grindr, has allegedly been creating fake accounts since October 2016. The accounts have Herrick's photos and personal details, including some falsehoods like a claim that that he's HIV positive.

The ex allegedly invites men to Herrick's apartment and the restaurant where he works. Sometimes as many as 16 strangers each day will show up looking for Herrick. In some instances, they are told not to be dissuaded if Herrick is resistant at first, "as part of an agreed upon rape fantasy or role play."

The case raises important questions in the social media age about impersonation, stalking and harassment.

"What are Grindr's legal responsibilities," asks Aaron Mackey, a Frank Stanton legal fellow at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "And what are its corporate and ethical responsibilities to its users when it learns that its platform is being abused in this way?"

Mackey said the answers have big implications.

As with many complaints against tech platforms, Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act is at play in the Grindr case. It's a unique legal protection that gives a broad layer of immunity to online companies from being held liable for user-generated content. Companies are supposed to act in good faith to protect users.

In 2015, Grindr used the CDA to prevail in another case. It was found not liable in a suit filed by a man who was arrested for a sexual encounter with a minor he met on the app.

But in Herrick's case, attorneys Carrie Goldberg and Tor Ekeland are relying on different laws. They're alleging product liability, fraud and deceptive business practices, according to an amended complaint filed on March 31.

"Much of our work is about finding the cracks and holes in [Section] 230," said Goldberg, who is known for taking on sexual privacy and revenge porn cases. "Companies don't deserve special protections when their product is dangerous and [Section] 230 doesn't give them protection in such cases."

Originally filed in a New York state court in January, the case was moved to federal court at Grindr's request in February.

According to the complaint, there have been more than 100 reports flagging the fake profiles in Grindr's app, resulting in only generic replies from Grindr ("Thank you for your report.").

Grindr's terms of service state that impersonation accounts aren't permitted, but it's unclear whether Grindr is capable of cracking down on the accounts. A March email from Grindr's counsel said the company cannot search for photographs, according to the complaint. "Grindr claims it cannot control who uses its product and that it lacks the basic software capabilities used by its competitors and the social media industry," it reads.

According to Matthew Zeiler, founder of image recognition startup Clarifai, there are multiple ways for companies to identify specific images on their platforms, and third party providers can help implement these capabilities.

Processes known as image hashing or visual search can detect near duplicate images from being posted on their platforms.

In a statement, Grindr said it's "committed to creating a safe environment through a system of digital and human screening tools, while also encouraging users to report suspicious and threatening activities. While we are constantly improving upon this process, it is important to remember that Grindr is an open platform. Grindr cooperates with law enforcement on a regular basis and does not condone abusive or violent behavior."

Grindr and its attorneys declined to comment further, citing the active litigation.

Didn't realize the dick in crazy axiom applied to gay men. Seems like it'd be more productive but less lucrative to directly confront the harasser whose name he knows.
 
Sounds like this dude gave out his personal information to some Internet site.

Wow! What could possibly happen?

In this case, literally thousands of queer ass motherfuckers with giant erect dicks charge directly toward your address wanting to pound you in the ass!

Is this surprising?

Only if you're really stupid.
 
I thought the title of this thread would be "Man sticks dick in crack pipe, which leads to terrible injuries". This is even worse; why is this guy suing grindr for actually working the way it's advertised? This is like having unprotected sex and trying to sue God because you contracted HIV.
 
I thought the title of this thread would be "Man sticks dick in crack pipe, which leads to terrible injuries". This is even worse; why is this guy suing grindr for actually working the way it's advertised? This is like having unprotected sex and trying to sue God because you contracted HIV.
unprotected sex is part of their culture shitlord
 
I wonder how many of these 1000+ men showed up despite the Grindr page stating the guy was HIV positive.
 
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Whoever was running the fakes was having fun with it, too:

ohurblack.jpg
This had gotten some BLM types on his ass:

https://twitter.com/UnpatrioticVet/status/797455694136020992 (tweetsave)

Apparently around the election his claim was that the accounts were fakes to defame him as a racist Trump supporter, rather than actually having guys show up for some muscle bear ass, but that was enough for him to claim LEAVING SOCIAL MEDIA FOREVER (spoiler: he didn't):

circumstances.jpg

I'm waiting to see how this plays out in court. Grindr uses geolocation to match folks with an idea of the proximity; whoever is doing this would have to be technically savvy enough to spoof his coords as well as have his schedule down enough to match his work and home at those times (since he's making claims of the men showing up at both). I'll admit having a healthy dose of skepticism as to the extent this is being portrayed as having gone to, but it'll all come out in the case.

This will be a fun test for Section 230. Sadly for this guy, it's barking up the wrong legal tree. If this is happening with such regularity that beat cops are having to protect the premises -- in fucking Harlem, no less -- there's hopefully something in the way of an investigation happening there so the police can not be dealing with this (although at some point someone has to wonder when you run out of guys near enough and/or horny enough to make the journey).
 
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