Tea, App and Sensitive Data
Digest more
Tea Dating Advice app rocketed to the top of Apple’s app store this week. It’s used for women to report issues with men. The point is helping keep women safe — but what about the legal issues around privacy and defamation?
Tea, a provocative dating app designed to let women anonymously ask or warn each other about men they’d encountered, rocketed to the top spot on the U.S. Apple App Store this week. On Friday, the company behind the app confirmed it had been hacked: Thousands of images, including selfies, were leaked online.
2don MSN
The rise of snitch apps
The viral app Tea asks women to rate dates and share "red flags." It may make dating more of a minefield.
1d
Extra.ie on MSNIs Tea app available in Ireland? Viral dating review platform hacked
Tea, a viral women-only app that allows users to share dating experiences, has suffered a massive data breach after being hacked.
There's a new app in the app store and many on TikTok have been sharing their unfiltered thoughts. The Tea app has everyone talking.
The viral Tea dating app gives women a chance to vet potential partners, but it has sparked concerns around privacy and misrepresentation.
1d
The Western Journal on MSN'This Is Demonic': No. 1 App on the Store Lets Women Anonymously Review Men
A social media app that allows women to anonymously rate, review, and share stories about men has taken the internet by storm. But not all that viral attention has been positive. Called "Tea," the top downloaded app on the Apple Store claims that it sets out to "protect women" in the dating market.
3d
Her Campus on MSNI Tried Tea: The App Where Women Anonymously Review Men
The post I Tried Tea: The App Where Women Anonymously Review Men first appeared on Her Campus.