Digital Secretary to question dating apps amid concerns over underage users

Jeremy Wright will write to Tinder and Grindr asking what measures they have in place to keep children safe - Bloomberg
Jeremy Wright will write to Tinder and Grindr asking what measures they have in place to keep children safe - Bloomberg

Jeremy Wright, the Digital Secretary, said he would write to Tinder and Grindr asking what measures they have in place to keep children safe, after an investigation claimed they are at risk of exploitation on such apps.

Police have investigated more than 30 incidents of child rape since 2015 where victims were sexually exploited after evading age checks on dating apps, the Sunday Times said.

The newspaper said records obtained through Freedom of Information laws showed 60 further cases of child sex offences via online dating services, including grooming, kidnapping and violent sexual assault.

The youngest victim was eight years old, the paper said.

Jeremy Wright, Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, described the findings as "truly shocking".

He added: "I will be writing to these companies asking what measures they have in place to keep children safe from harm, including verifying their age.

"If I'm not satisfied with their response, I reserve the right to take further action."

Grindr told the Sunday Times: "Any account of sexual abuse or other illegal behaviour is troubling to us as well as a clear violation of our terms of service.

"Our team is constantly working to improve our digital and human screening tools to prevent and remove improper underage use of our app."

Tinder said it uses both automated and manual tools to moderate users, including scanning profiles for 'red flag' images, and said it also depends on users to report profiles that may belong to a minor.

A spokeswoman said: "We utilise a network of industry-leading automated and manual moderation and review tools, systems and processes - and spend millions of dollars annually - to prevent, monitor and remove minors and other inappropriate behaviour from our app.

"We don't want minors on Tinder."

Mr Wright said the paper's findings provide "yet more evidence that online tech firms must do more to protect children".

It comes after Instagram pledged to ban graphic images of self-harm after Health Secretary Matt Hancock said social media companies "need to do more" to curb their impact on teenagers' mental health.

The announcement followed the death of 14-year-old Molly Russell, whose family found she had viewed content on social media linked to anxiety, depression, self-harm and suicide before taking her own life in November 2017.