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Match.com wants to match its members up with Facebook users

Facebook CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg speaks to press and advertising partners at a Facebook announcement in New York in this November 6, 2007 file photo. The online hangout is mining friends' buying habits, -all so advertisers can reach those most likely to buy with pitches most relevant to them, even as doing so means amassing more data on you.
Facebook CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg speaks to press and advertising partners at a Facebook announcement in New York in this November 6, 2007 file photo. The online hangout is mining friends’ buying habits, -all so advertisers can reach those most likely to buy with pitches most relevant to them, even as doing so means amassing more data on you.
Photo courtesy of Photo by AP Photo/Craig Ruttle

NEW YORK (AP) — Match.com, an old standby of online dating, wants to make some new connections among the fast-growing number of Facebook users worldwide.

Dating Web site Match.com, owned by media mogul Barry Diller’s InterActiveCorp conglomerate, plans to launch two new features this week that bring greater social networking capabilities to its more than 15 million Match members and to the roughly 58 million active users of Facebook.

Dallas-based Match, which started in 1995, will announce Thursday the launch of Little Black Book, a new way to link Facebook users with Match.com daters. Already this week, it has introduced Match My Friends, which allows friends or family members of a prospective online dater to create a profile for him or her — with the approval by the wanna be-dater.

”There are a lot of people out there who are interested in online dating and just need that extra push, if you will,” Match.com general manager Craig Wax said.

”Both (features) are looking at the social nature of the Internet as it is today,” said Kristy McKnight, vice president of product management at Match.

Little Black Book lets Facebook users sign up to see the other Facebook users who hope to date someone. Once they’re signed up, users of Little Black Book will receive potential matches among Facebook users and non-Facebook users who are signed up with Match.com.

New York-based IAC owns other Internet properties including Citysearch, Evite and Ask.com.

— Vinnee Tong, AP Writer

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