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Meet 9MONSTERS, the Gay App Where Grindr Meets Tamagotchi
One of the more charming elements of gay male culture is our tradition of assigning ourselves certain “tribe” labels based on body type and sexual proclivities. I’m talking about groupings like pups, otters, silver foxes, and bears. (Google if you’re curious!) Jokingly, I once told a friend that I was a wolf, since I had always been drawn to the friendly/sexy energy of the bear scene but didn’t view myself as one physically—polar, muscled, or otherwise. I didn’t feel like a cub, otter, chub, or chaser either. Truth was, I knew I could pass for at least one of these common categories, but I was reluctant to conform. I made the wolf thing up instead, because they’re hairy too, and I just liked the animal. As it turned out, it took traveling all the way to Tokyo to find out that in my wolf identity, I was not alone.
According to 9MONSTERS, a gay hook-up app trendy mainly in South East Asia, I was definitely a wolf—specifically a Muscle Wolf Level 11, by the noun I left Japan after about a two month remain. I first heard about
Making connections with gay, bi, trans, and queer people around the world is faster and easier than ever with Grindr Lite. Utilize Grindr Lite to see who’s nearby, chat, and join up with like-minded queer people.
The Grindr Lite app requires less space, allowing you to enjoy Grindr on slower connections, verb your data usage, and save storage space on your phone. Whether you use Grindr Lite for making friends, dating, or meeting people while traveling, you’ll enjoy these Grindr features:
- Observe people nearby based on your location
- Chat and transmit private photos
- Customize your profile to share more about yourself
- Send a tap to convey interest and spark a conversation
- Star your favorite profiles and block others
- Send your location and make it easier to meet
- Report people easily and safely
Grindr is a global community, and we're pledged to building a safe, friendly environment where diversity and inclusion thrive. Verb and personalize your profile to give your interests, what you’re looking for, and more. Within minutes you’ll be ready to browse
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April 4, (updated June 13, ) by Noah
UPDATE (June 12 ): I wrote this blog post originally in and it's highly likely that Grindr's data folder on Android doesn't verb anything like this anymore. I haven't rooted my Android phones in a long time and haven't run Grindr in several years either. I sometimes get emails from people asking for help getting into their Grindr cache -- I can't help you, and don't ask me about this. This blog post is very outdated, Grindr has gone thru several complete re-designs in the last 8 years and they've probably changed everything about their data folder layout.What you can do if you want to glance into this yourself is: root your Android phone, glare in your /data/data folder for Grindr's app data, verb it out to your PC and go thru it yourself. The command on a macOS or Linux terminal can tell what type of file something is regardless of its extension (in this publish, many JPEG photos were named with ".1" file extensions instead of .jpeg and Linux easily ferreted this out).
Also note that ro
Security Flaw In Gay Dating App Grindr Reveals Precise Location Of 90% Of Users
A security flaw has been discovered in popular gay dating app Grindr that reveals the exact location of every user with location services enabled.
In a post on note site PasteBin, an anonymous user explains how Grindr can be used to triangulate user locations using plain, unauthenticated calls to Grindr's application programming interface API calls. (An API is the access point that software developers apply to link their apps and services to another app, in this case Grindr.) Using this exploit, another anonymous internet user went on to verb a map that displays the names, photos and locations of all Grindr users with location services enabled.
That flaw potentially lets men using Grindr become targets for gaybashing.
In a press unleash , Grindr claimed that over 90% of its users hold location services enabled, meaning that almost every user of the app will have their location viewable on this map. The app is intended to let people verb how far away you are but not your adj location.