The data of thousands of white supremacists seeking love through a dating app was exposed in an operation carried out by an antifascist group led by activist and researcher Martha Root. Root, who used this pseudonym to protect her identity, infiltrated the white supremacist dating apps WhiteDate, WhiteChild, and WhiteDeal. To do so, she created various fake profiles of single women supposedly looking for partners on these apps.
Using AI, she managed to attract a significant number of white men. These men, unaware of Root’s objective to expose them, entered numerous personal and private details into their conversations, which were subsequently downloaded and publicly shared by the activist.
“These users spewed their vile opinions, saying things like ‘white people are an endangered species’ or ‘I’m looking for a pure, uncontaminated white woman,'” reports The Daily Beast, revealing their complete exposure in a catfishing operation dubbed Nazi-Leaks.
The leaked data contained personal information such as ages, addresses, physical descriptions, education, and even income. All of this was included in a file created by Martha Root titled Distributed Denial of Secrets.
This document was displayed in December 2025 during a webinar where the activist was joined by German journalists Eva Hoffmann and Christian Fuchs (authors of a revealing article about WhiteDate published in the German newspaper Die Zeit). There, dressed as the popular action character Pink Ranger (Power Rangers), she displayed the information obtained and then deleted the domains and all the content included in the white supremacist apps WhiteDate, WhiteChild, and WhiteDeal.
“Delete whitechild.net,” could be read on her MacBook screen during the presentation of the webinar titled ‘The Heartbreak Machine: Nazis in the Echo Chamber’. “Done!” followed. “Delete whitedate.net database,” she continued, “Done!” After her action, a resounding applause from the audience filled the room.
According to the website Futurism, 86% of the users of these white supremacist dating apps were men. The rest, women, made up the more than 6,500 users of the app. They all shared a common goal: to find a white partner so they could have white children and wipe out the Black race.
At the head of WhiteDate, as revealed by activist Martha Root in her exposé published by Futurism, was a woman named Christiane Horn. Her data, like that of the other users investigated by Martha Root, has also been made public.
The person responsible for these three white supremacist dating sites did not hide her true identity in the chat rooms nor did she use any pseudonym. “And in case anyone is interested, her hobbies were feng shui, brunch, and Naturgeisters,” those mystical and supernatural beings of German origin with a strong presence in Norse mythology.
All the data collected during the investigation is now in the hands of the competent authorities and the three dating apps for supremacists have been completely deleted.
Source: msn




