BRUSSELS, March 7 (Reuters) - Match Group-owned (MTCH.O) dating app Tinder on Thursday agreed to better inform users about discounted prices for its premium services following scrutiny from national consumer watchdogs in the European Union over its pricing practices.
The authorities' concerns centred on Tinder's use of automated means to identify users who showed little or no interest in their standard price premium services in order to offer them personalised discounts.
They said Tinder applied these personalised prices without informing users, in breach of the bloc's consumer laws.
Following a nearly two-year-long discussion with the Consumer Protection Cooperation Network (CPC), the Swedish Consumer Agency and the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets, Tinder will now provide more clarity to users, the European Commission said.
It said Tinder agreed to inform users that discounts the company proposes for premium services are personalised by automated means and also why they are being offered personalised discounts.
"Personalisation techniques nullify the possibility to compare prices, effectively disempowering consumers in their purchasing decisions," EU Justice Commissioner Didier Reynders said in a statement.
"This is why EU consumer law now requires that traders disclose whether their price is personalised through automated means," he said.
The consumer bodies will monitor Tinder's compliance, with fines possible for non-compliance.