Grindr turns off location services in Olympic village - Action News
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Grindr turns off location services in Olympic village

Gay dating app Grindr has turned off location services in the Olympic Village to protect athletes' privacy.

Popular gay dating app says it made the move to protect athletes from being outed

A man wearing sunglasses holds a white rose.
Robin Labarrere holds a flower after performing Monday at the opening of Pride House, the safe space for 2SLGBTQ+ athletes at the Olympic Games Paris 2024. Dating app Grindr has turned off its location services to prevent athletes from being outed. (Natacha Pisarenko/The Associated Press)

Gay dating app Grindr has turned off location services in the Olympic village to protect athletes' privacy.

After some app users posted on social media last week that they were not able to use the "explore" function to find otherprofiles in the area, Grindr confirmed in a blogpost that it had disabled its location-based features for the Olympic village, where competing athletes are staying in Paris.

"If an athlete is not out or comes from a country where being LGBTQ+ is dangerous or illegal, using Grindrcan put them at risk of being outed by curious individuals who may try to identify and expose them on the app," the post read.

Grindr turned off its "explore" and "roam" features within the village, and turned off the "show distance" feature by default, but allowsusers to share an approximate distance if they choose to turn it on.

It also disabled private videos andscreenshotsfor profile images and in-chat media, and turned on unlimited disappearing messages, among other privacy features.

Grindr imposed the same restrictions at the 2022 Beijing Olympics.

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Jrmy Goupille, co-chair of the Olympic queer community hub Pride House, said in previous Gamespeople have tried to expose athletes who are not officially out by checking heights, weights and locations of people on datingapps.

"You have to protect them because so many bad people exist. At the same time, there are so many beautiful athletes," Goupille said. "They want to meet someone and it's difficult."

The Daily Beast published in article in 2016 forwhich a reporter, who identified as heterosexual, used the app at the Rio Olympics and includedinformation about athletes he matched with.

Facing backlash, the publication ultimately took down the article and issued an apology "to the athletes who may have been inadvertently compromised by our story."

The Paris Olympics have broken a record by having 193 openly 2SLGBTQ+ athletes competing, according to Outsports, a website compiling a database of openly queer Olympians. That surpasses 186 athletes at the 2020Tokyo Olympics.

Outsportsco-founder Jim Buzinski said when the sitestarted tracking athletes at the Sydney Olympics in 2000, they counted only around five who were openly 2SLGBTQ+.

With files from The Associated Press