Woman Sues Tinder After Date Took Her to Arby’s

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Woman Sues Tinder After Date Took Her to Arby’s

In a lawsuit that has left legal experts clutching their pearls and fast-food enthusiasts shaking their heads, an Illinois woman is suing the popular dating app Tinder for emotional distress after her date took her to an Arby’s in downtown Chicago on their first rendezvous. Sheila Greenberg claims her expectations were utterly defiled when instead of a candle-lit dinner, she was presented with a Beef ‘n Cheddar and curly fries. Sheila described the experience as akin to ‘a romantic evening in a dumpster with free WiFi.’

The lawsuit, filed at the Cook County Circuit Court last Thursday, states, “Tinder’s algorithms promised a dinner destination involving tablecloths and not laminated trays.” The defendant, a man only referred to as ‘Brad’, allegedly told Sheila that the meat mountain on her tray was a ‘modern aphrodisiac’, adding insult to injury. A Tinder spokesperson issued a press release stating that while they cannot control individual user choices, they do not endorse dates that involve mass-produced roast beef or faint eau de fryer grease.

With online dating platforms continuously evolving into quasi-robotic matchmakers, this case raises unsettling questions about how much control artificial intelligence really wields over our love lives. Recent data leaked from Tinder’s internal servers reveals new AI-driven features like ‘Culinary Compatibility’ – which erroneously matched Sheila’s love for fine dining with Brad’s affinity for drive-thru convenience. The program uses sophisticated algorithms to suggest dinner locations based on users’ food preferences but evidently cannot distinguish between filet mignon and sliced processed beef.

This absurd litigation has sparked debates amongst users over the platform’s responsibility in setting dating standards. Legal analyst Mark Rubenstein commented, “If AI can convince people that Arby’s is date-worthy, imagine what else it could do? Influence elections? Write novels? Make us all buy Crocs?” A confidential source from within Tinder revealed that since introducing algorithmic restaurant matchmaking, similar complaints have tripled, citing side effects such as excessive indigestion and post-date embarrassment.

The case’s peculiar nature leaves legal scholars pondering its implications for future digital romantic engagements. Meanwhile, back in Chicago, Sheila reportedly plans on expanding her culinary horizons—now strictly avoiding anything served in paper wrappings or accompanied by horsey sauce. As for Tinder, they might just rename their feature to ‘Gastronomic Roulette’. Only time will tell if romance survives this meaty debacle.

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