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Tinder is adding a bunch of safety features to spare you the horror date

No more creepy messages, Tinder's AI is on the case.

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Tinder iPhone app
Rachit Agarwal / Digital Trends

Tinder just held its first-ever product keynote, Tinder Sparks 2026, announcing several major updates across AI, new social formats, and real-world dating events. But out of everything announced, the safety upgrades deserve the most attention. Online dating can be dangerous, and getting that part right matters more.

Tinder is rolling out a new wave of trust and safety improvements powered by AI models. By integrating AI into its platform, the company aims to strengthen its safety features, enhance user protection, and create a more secure environment for its users.

How does this feature work?

Tinder is upgrading two of its more prominent safety features with AI. The first is “Are You Sure?”, which pops up when you are about to send something that could be considered harmful. Previously, it used basic keyword detection. Now, it understands tone and conversational nuance, making it better at detecting such messages and stopping you from making a mistake.

The second is “Does This Bother You?”, which works on the receiving end. It detects potentially inappropriate incoming messages and makes reporting them easier. 

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The brand new addition here is the auto-blur feature, which automatically hides disrespectful messages before someone even has the chance to read them. If it works, it should prevent daters from having a traumatic experience. 

Is Tinder actually getting safer?

Tinder has stated that the company has launched over 20 trust and safety features globally in the past few years. It is also expanding Face Check, a mandatory liveness verification feature, to more regions around the world.

The new AI integration that flags messages before things go sideways is another step in the right direction. The combination of verified identities and smarter message moderation means the app is making an effort to filter out bad actors early.

That said, none of this is a perfect solution, and first dates will always carry some level of uncertainty, so it’s still important to perform our own due diligence.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over seven years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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