Right now we require Facebook, because we heavily rely on the graph to match groups while requiring minimal work from our members. For instance, we want to make sure the two groups don't already know each other, and we haven't figured out a good way to replicate this functionality without Facebook (e.g. "tell us all the people you know!")
If you have any ideas, though, we'd love to hear them.
This is one of the very few fair reasons to use facebook. However, I would have liked to see the explanation in the website (why only facebook?) and a stronger wording telling what you will and won't do with facebook. You're saying "We won't post on your behalf" but you don't say anything about what you will do. You might not post on my facebook, but you might be looking through my messages; that kind of thing is unfortunately the hallmark of facebook itself. Without an explanation, a facebook-only site looks very fishy. (heh)
Yeah, I did not foresee that; it's actually quite critical you use Facebook.
Anything requiring the users to confirm they don't know the name of the other party slows the process quite some and removes the laissez-faire element.
And what about people looking to meet with the same gender? Even though you aren't actively advertising as a dating service, I imagine that if me and two friends showed up, the girls looking for eligible single men might be a little sad.
Right now we require Facebook, because we heavily rely on the graph to match groups while requiring minimal work from our members. For instance, we want to make sure the two groups don't already know each other, and we haven't figured out a good way to replicate this functionality without Facebook (e.g. "tell us all the people you know!")
If you have any ideas, though, we'd love to hear them.