Online dating company Match Group is seeking to solve an age-old problem with romance: how to get men to behave better.

The group, which owns matchmaking platforms Tinder and Hinge, is using artificial intelligence to detect

signals that somebody might be sending a message that is abusive or overly sexual, as part of its push to coach users into more chivalrous conduct online.

For “men especially”, a “big part of our safety approach is focused on driving behavioural change so that we can make dating experiences safer and more respectful”, said Yoel Roth, head of trust and safety at Match.

When a user types an “off-colour” message, Match’s apps will generate an automated prompt asking them if they are sure they want to send it. “We think of it internally as ‘too much, too soon’,” Roth said. A fifth of people who receive these prompts reconsider their messages, according to Match.

The efforts to enlist AI to help improve dating behaviour come as the three largest online matchmaking brands globally — Match’s Tinder and rivals Badoo and Bumble — are all shedding users as a result of so-called dating app fatigue among Generation Z users.

This has seen online dating groups launch an array of new features, including friend-finding and community-building products, in an attempt to help reverse a post-pandemic slowdown in users.

Surveys suggest that “burnout” on matchmaking platforms is particularly prevalent among young women, a group that Match chief executive Bernard Kim last year described as “literally the most critical demographic for all dating apps”.

“In the context of online dating, where young people grow up and enter the dating marketplace [ . . .] there’s a real need and opportunity to help people understand the norms and behaviours that go along with respectful and consensual dating,” said Roth.

Roth joined Match in March last year, 16 months after suffering a very public break-up from his previous company Twitter, now known as X, where he worked for more than seven years heading the team that banned US President Donald Trump’s account in January 2021 following the attack on the Capitol.

He resigned just two weeks after Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter in October 2022, writing in the New York Times that he could not remain at a company where policies were “defined by edict”. Soon after, Roth became the target of a flood of harassment, which followed criticism from Musk himself.

As Match’s safety chief, Roth will once again have to contend with Trump and his close confidant Musk.