Meet 270 Of The 'Most Eligible' Singles In Online Dating

Hinge really, really wants you to know how attractive and non-creepy its users are.
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Want to meet the most eligible singles in tech? Or are you more into the consulting type? 

Dating app Hinge has identified 270 of its "most eligible" users, all of them young professionals, many at well-known companies, across nine industries. The aim here is to showcase what the app's management team has identified as the cream of the crop of its users. 

The Tinder-style matchmaking app, which connects users based on shared Facebook friends, selected these ladies and gents not only for their career profile but also for how frequently they get right-swipes from other users, said Jean-Marie McGrath, a public relations and community liaison at the app. (Just as with Tinder, swiping right on Hinge means you're interested in a person's profile, and swiping left means you're not.) 

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Hinge

The men and women featured on Hinge's newest list come from a variety of professional fields -- 30 singles for each industry. Some of the career fields include entertainment and art, finance and consulting, legal and policy, nonprofit and education, startup and small business, and technology. 

The company seems to be eager to present its users as normal and totally datable -- perhaps in response to some of the more unsavory horror stories about dating apps. Earlier this year, the app also published rankings for its most eligible users in New York City and in San Francisco.

Hinge, which has been called the "anti-Tinder," only hooks up people who have mutual Facebook friends, or friends of friends. In addition, Hinge imports relationship information from Facebook and flags any users who aren't single. The company says these features help reduce the number or creepers or fakers who often mar the world of online dating. And, in theory, you could ask your mutual friends for a second opinion before going on a potential date with a match. However, there's no guarantee that your matches won't be creepers -- after all, there are plenty of unsavory types on Facebook.

Then again, maybe Hinge is onto something. We spoke to Christian Vazquez, who was featured among the 30 most eligible professionals working in the legal and policy field, and he appears to have more confidence in Hinge more than similar dating apps. 

"I started using Hinge about a year ago when my friend met her boyfriend on it and they've been going strong since," said Vazquez, who graduated from Yale College and Duke University School of Law. "So it seems like one of the few apps that actually works at matching." 

You can find the complete list of Hinge's "most eligible" professionals, along with individual bios, here. (Brace yourself for a serious combination of hotness, talent and success.) For a look at the 30 most eligible tech company employees on Hinge, check out the slideshow below: 

Most Eligible Singles In Tech
Frederique Dame(01 of30)
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Product management at Uber.

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Justin Pytka(02 of30)
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Manager of strategy and marketing at Zipcar.

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Nitasha Khetarpal(03 of30)
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Product marketing and strategy at Adobe; head of marketing and business development at Tools of Growth.

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Valentine Aseyo(04 of30)
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Global marketing solutions at Facebook.

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Denise Eures(05 of30)
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Strategic customer success manager at Mixpanel.

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Amit Patel(06 of30)
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Director of enterprise at Lyft.

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Kristina Vanderheyden(07 of30)
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Enterprise account executive at LinkedIn.

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Sandra Fong(08 of30)
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Integrated marketing manager at Dolby Laboratories.

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Jeffrey Gerson(09 of30)
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Community manager for North America at Instagram.

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Robert Larue(10 of30)
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Account executive at Optimizely.

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Lucy Chen(11 of30)
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Strategy and analytics at LinkedIn.

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Eric Levine(12 of30)
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Engineering manager at Airbnb.

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Gabriele Wooten(13 of30)
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Training and communication specialist at LivingSocial.

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Steven Maheshwary(14 of30)
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Marketing manager at Amazon.

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Liza Dunning(15 of30)
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Brand content lead at Airbnb.

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Clayton Miller(16 of30)
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Marketing at Salesforce.

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Daniel Bilen(17 of30)
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Territory manager at Uber.

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Jamie Cannon(18 of30)
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Director of global app marketing at Microsoft.

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Nina Brentlinger(19 of30)
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Incoming MBA candidate at the MIT Sloan School of Management. Previously, product marketing manager at Adobe.

(credit:Hinge)
Ari Nateman(20 of30)
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Solutions engineer at Genesys.

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Veronica Finch(21 of30)
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International University recruiter at Microsoft.

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Shane Lay(22 of30)
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Sales development manager at CloudSense.

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Paul Tinker(23 of30)
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AOL-Verizon senior account director Xbox.

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Jessica Gonzalez(24 of30)
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Product engineer at Hewlett-Packard.

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Matt Brinkman(25 of30)
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Platform specialist at Google.

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Kevin Turner(26 of30)
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Strategic partnerships intern at Spotify. Current MBA candidate at the MIT Sloan School of Management.

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Michael Michelin(27 of30)
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Market manager at Angie's List.

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Caroline Davani(28 of30)
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Commercial account manager at Tableau.

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Madelaine Fouts(29 of30)
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Digital communications manager at Microsoft.

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Tommy McMahon(30 of30)
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Corporate development and strategic onvestments at Amazon.

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Lorenzo Ligato covers technology and Internet culture, and is based in New York. You can contact him at lorenzo.ligato@huffingtonpost.com or on Twitter: @lorenzowrites.

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