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Party’s over: Apple & TikTok deplatform ‘secret party’ app for promoting illegal gatherings amid Covid-19

VybeTogether, a party-promoting app that sold itself as a tool to both organize and find secret parties in New York City in the era of Covid-19, has been all but wiped off the internet after a parade of scolds accused it of putting people at risk.

Kicked out of Apple’s app store and deleted from TikTok, the app took down its website late Tuesday night, essentially admitting defeat after a New York Times writer called attention to it on Twitter. Referring to the app developers as “terrible people,” Times writer Taylor Lorenz slammed VybeTogether for “promoting COVID-unsafe large, indoor household parties.”

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A FAQ on the app’s website claimed the app was actually for promoting “small gatherings” and not “big parties.” A spokesperson doubled down on that line, telling The Verge the app was merely “designed to help other people organize small get-togethers in parks or apartments during COVID” and that VybeTogether had “never hosted any large parties” itself.

The rep blamed “one over-the-top marketing video that left a wrong impression” for the subsequent deplatforming efforts, blanking its Instagram page save for the lines “Blown out of proportion by media. We DO NOT CONDONE LARGE GATHERINGS,” before it was booted off that platform on Wednesday.

While the company’s marketing videos are no longer available, Lorenz posted one clip that advertised “gatherings every weekend” as well as an invite to a New Year’s Eve party called “The Golden Era of Eden.”

Alexander Dimcevski, the co-founder of VybeTogether’s predecessor app Trendies, even removed his LinkedIn profile from public view after Lorenz sicced her followers on him. Several posters called for him to be blacklisted from the tech industry, accusing him (and his app’s users) of “murdering people.

Other social media users dropped everything they were doing to get VybeTogether deplatformed – including calling NYC authorities, whom they excoriated for moving too slowly to shut down parties that weren’t even happening yet, and tagging Governor Andrew Cuomo himself.

Others, however, urged Lorenz and her fans to mind their own business, reasoning that no one was forcing them to attend so-called “plague parties.”

VybeTogether required users to submit links to their Instagram accounts and upload ‘party photos,’ perhaps to lessen the chances of undercover cops (or self-appointed social distancing police) infiltrating the modern-day speakeasies. Gatherings of more than 10 people are illegal in New York, and dozens of parties have been shut down since the restrictions came into effect.

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