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Regulation of international
marriage brokers creates competitive
advantage for big Internet
dating companies.
(PRWEB) February 14, 2006
-- The Big Internet Dating
Organization (BID) supports
the efforts of Internet dating
sites in their opposition
to criminal background check
regulations (see http://www.onlinedatingmagazine.com/news2005/online-dating-regulation.html).
However, despite BID's opposition
to background checks, BID
supports the International
Marriage Broker Regulation
Act of 2005 (IMBRA) as it
will enable BID's Member Websites
to capture more of the cross-cultural
dating market.
Cross-cultural dating is the
fastest growing segment of
the Internet dating industry.
It seems that there is a large
and growing segment of American
men who desire strong family
relationships and believe
women from other cultures
also have this goal in mind.
BID’s Member companies
facilitate communication between
foreign women and American
men, although it is not their
primary business. Typically,
the women do not pay for membership
since many come from impovershed
circumstances, and the men
join as paying members in
order to receive their contact
information.
Feminist organizations have
been seeking to regulate the
cross-cultural segment for
years. The first law was from
Washington State in January,
2002, (House Bill 2667). The
feminist groups that helped
write the law were mainly
focused on International Matchmaking
Organizations (IMO’s)
that, in their opinion, advertise
women as commodities and perpetuate
sexist and racist stereotypes
of foreign women. However,
the law was too inclusive
and would have negatively
impacted our Member Websites’
cross-cultural segments. Therefore,
BID worked with these groups
to develop a more narrowly
tailored definition that would
only affect the IMO’s.
To further separate the IMO’s
from the cross-cultural dating
business, they were labeled
International Marriage Brokers
and the law was taken national
as the International Marriage
Broker Regulation Act. The
hallmark of the law is the
requirement that mandatory
criminal and marital background
checks be performed on each
American man and each foreign
woman must receive and approve
of this information before
her email address can be released.
This last provision will certainly
drive more traffic to BID
Member Websites since most
men, CRIMINAL OR NOT, will
not want to be bothered with
all the paperwork and compromise
their privacy just to say
“hi” to a woman.
BID also anticipates that,
in addition to the declining
customer base, the cost of
compliance will drive most
marriage brokers out of business.
IMBRA goes into effect on
March, 6 2006. Already, the
cross-cultural segments of
BID's Member Websites are
showing increased traffic.
BID thanks the writers of
IMBRA for their support and
appreciate their concern for
women worldwide. |