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			 The gay dating app has been a godsend for Hua, allowing the 
			university student in the southern city of Guangzhou to privately 
			contact Chinese men seeking same-sex companionship. 
 Homosexuality is not illegal in China, but remains a taboo subject 
			in the world's most populous country.
 
 "I found nine (gay friends) through the app," said Hua, 22, who felt 
			he could never talk to his heterosexual friends about being gay. 
			"Now I have a group of friends just like me to whom I can open my 
			mind."
 
 Blued is the brainchild of Ma Baoli, 36, a former policeman who quit 
			his job to play Cupid to millions of gay men in China.
 
 The free Chinese-language app uses the GPS capability of users' 
			smartphones to identify nearby members. As with other dating apps, 
			users can scan profiles, chat privately with the potential Mr Right 
			or hang out in a group chatroom.
 
			 
			Blued quickly found favor with gay people, adding 15 million users 
			in two years. There is scope for expansion, with Ma's company 
			raising $30 million last year from a U.S. venture capital firm. Its 
			long-term goal is to list on the Nasdaq.
 "That would be an even better way to show off China's development 
			than a big advertisement in Times Square," said Ma, referring to New 
			York's most famous intersection.
 
 NOT JUST A DATING APP
 
 LGBT activists in China say Blued has helped gay men develop a 
			positive self-image and fight social prejudices that force 
			homosexuals to stay anonymous.
 
 "It is not only a hook-up app any more, but also spreading knowledge 
			about the community," said Raymond Phang, an organizer of the annual 
			Shanghai Pride celebrations.
 
			
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			Ma's efforts to prevent HIV/AIDS have found support from a 
			government eager to promote safe sex among gay Chinese.
 At the Beijing headquarters of Ma's firm, app users can take free 
			HIV tests, administered only by gay members of a staff of more than 
			50, so as to minimize any potential embarrassment.
 
 A red ribbon icon on the app gives Blued users easy access to 
			information on condom use and AIDS. It offers authorities a way to 
			reach out to gay men, a group the World Health Organisation says is 
			at high risk of catching the disease.
 
 "On the street, it is difficult for researchers to find gay groups," 
			said Ma. "We could help the government to help the people that it 
			can't reach."
 
 (Reporting by Beijing bureau; Writing by Tony Tharakan; Editing by 
			Clarence Fernandez)
 
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