A new dating app for gay men is facing scrutiny after a WIRED investigation raised questions about how the app was promoted online.
Goose launched as an invite-only dating app that promised a different experience from existing platforms such as Grindr.

The app positioned itself around more intentional connections, exclusivity, and a less hookup-focused approach to gay dating.
But shortly after launch, WIRED reported that many of the Instagram accounts promoting Goose appeared to be AI-generated or otherwise inauthentic.
According to the investigation, some gay men received similar direct messages from attractive Instagram accounts encouraging them to download the app.

Several of those accounts reportedly used profile photos that researchers said were likely generated by artificial intelligence.
WIRED also pointed to unusual patterns across some of the accounts, including similar captions, limited posting histories, and engagement that did not always appear organic.
The reporting does not prove that every promotional account connected to Goose was fake.
It does, however, raise serious questions about transparency in the fast-growing market for dating apps and AI-driven marketing.
Goose has pushed back on parts of the reporting, and the company has not accepted the idea that it is running a deception campaign.

Still, the controversy has touched a nerve because dating apps already depend heavily on trust.
Users are not only sharing photos and personal preferences, but also details about identity, location, attraction, and relationships.
If people believe an app is being promoted through fake profiles or AI-generated influencers, it can quickly undermine confidence before the platform has even had a chance to establish itself.
The story also arrives at a moment when AI-generated people are becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish from real influencers.
For LGBTQ+ users, that creates a particularly uncomfortable question.
When a handsome stranger slides into your DMs to recommend a new dating app, are you being invited by a real person or targeted by a marketing machine?
Goose may still become a real competitor in the gay dating space.
But the early controversy shows how quickly excitement around a new platform can turn into suspicion when authenticity is unclear.
In online dating, the product is not just the app.
It is trust.
📷 IG @goose
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