NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Going ballistic on Twitter (TWTR) - Get Report is not very becoming of a company that's soon to go public on its own.

Tinder, which will be part of the Match Group being spun off by Barry Diller's IAC Interactive (IACI) , went on an epic tweet storm following a Vanity Fair article that portrayed its user base in a negative light, setting off what what Vanity Fair coined the "Dating Apocalypse."

The Match spin-off, whose date has not been set yet, is one of the faster growing parts of IAC. Revenue rose 19% year-over-year to $255 million in the second quarter, with paid subscribers growing 18% year-over-year to 4.13 million.

Tinder, which claims as many as 26 million matches each day, has become a topic of conversation on Wall Street, both amongst old and young. At the Ira Sohn hedge fund conference in New York City, the winner of the student investment portion of the conference presented IAC as an investment idea, heavily relying on Tinder as a source of future growth, even going so far as to coin a new acronym, COGL -- cost of getting laid.

Several Wall Street analysts have heaped praise on Tinder as well, citing the fact it's now at the forefront of investors' minds.

In a July 29 research note discussing IAC's earnings, Wells Fargo analyst Peter Stabler noted the "the trajectory of Tinder app monetization remains front and center." JMP Securities analyst Ignatius Njoku noted that despite the expected "near-term choppiness" expected from Tinder, it's still likely to continue exceeding management and investor expectations as the product continues to grow.