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They're helping: Mass shootings inspire dating app to ban photos including guns

We’ll admit: we’d not heard of the dating app Bumble until now, but if you’re a gun enthusiast looking for that special someone to spend time with at the gun range, you might want to hold off downloading it.

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We thought wearing an orange pin to the Oscars was the least effective thing you could do to prevent mass shootings, but Bumble is really onto something with its ban on photos including guns (active military or law enforcement in uniform excepted).

Bumble writes:

As mass shootings continue to devastate communities across the country, it’s time to state unequivocally that gun violence is not in line with our values, nor do these weapons belong on Bumble.

From today on, we will begin the process of moderating all new and previously uploaded photos for the presence of guns. Our terms and conditions will be updated to reflect this decision.

Bumble is also making a $100,000 donation to March For Our Lives, the organization founded by the brave young survivors of the Parkland tragedy. We stand with them, and join them in working towards a non-violent future.

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That’s a big donation — not George Clooney big or Oprah Winfrey big, but still pretty big.

https://twitter.com/OhioCoastie/status/970846409388851200

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