Grindr Was a Safe Space for Gay Men. Its HIV Status Leak Betrayed Us

The app helped revolutionise the community’s approach to HIV. Sharing that data undoes all its good work

The Guardian
The Guardian

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‘Grindr has a field where users can let people know if they are HIV-positive or negative.’ Photo: Leon Neal/Getty Images

By Brian Moylan

Gay men have always needed safe spaces, somewhere they could congregate without fear of stigma and judgment or, even more essentially, persecution and violence. Over the past several decades, those spaces were more often than not gay bars and clubs, where gay men flocked to be themselves in a way that wasn’t always possible in “polite society”. The fact that there were also scores of men at those establishments looking for casual encounters wasn’t just a bonus, it was often the entire point.

For better or worse, in the digital age the safe space where many gay men are finding that community (and sexual) connection is on Grindr, one of a host of mobile “dating” apps that sorts users based on their proximity to one another. That’s why it was especially troubling when users discovered on Tuesday that Grindr had been sharing their information — including location and HIV status — with third-party firms.

It may surprise some that Grindr would have that sort of sensitive medical information to share with businesses helping them optimise their product, but it’s part of a…

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