logo
What is Tea Dating Advice? Controversial app lets women review men

What is Tea Dating Advice? Controversial app lets women review men

USA Today2 days ago
A popular app that allows women to review and background check men they go on dates with is reeling from a massive data breach, which has exposed sensitive information about its users.
Tea Dating Advice allows women users to vet their dates, using crowdsourced information and public records to evaluate men, including their dating profiles. The intention, according to the app's website, is to make dating safer for women.
The company said July 25 that a security breach compromised "a legacy data storage system" of about 72,000 images, including photos of users and images from posts, comments and direct messages in the app. The breach has raised concerns amongst its users and reignited conversations online about digital safety and privacy. It has also resurfaced some controversies over the premise of the application, mainly among men.
Here's what to know the app and the recent data breach.
What is the Tea app?
Tea Dating Advice was unveiled in 2023, but only recently surged in popularity after it received increased attention online. Its name comes from the phrase "spilling tea," or to share secrets or gossip.
The app gives users a way to check the personal history of men, including a "Reverse Image Search" feature to catch men catfishing − pretending to be someone else online to attract potential romantic partners. They can also look up phone numbers to "check for hidden marriages," and implement background checks to see whether a man has a criminal record, the company says. Women on the app can also post anonymous dating reviews, share experiences with men they've dated (good and bad, giving them corresponding "green" or "red" flags) and share other information.
According to the company's website, founder Sean Cook launched Tea after he saw his mother go through the "terrifying" experience online dating, when she was catfished and engaged with men who ended up having criminal records.
"At its core, Tea is built on one fundamental belief: Women should never have to compromise their safety while dating," the company says.
Tea says it donates 10% of its revenue to the National Domestic Violence Hotline.
Data breach followed surge in app interest
Though the application has been around for more than two years, it has only recently skyrocketed in popularity after going viral on social media.
The company said in multiple posts between July 22 and July 26 that it was working to verify hundreds of thousands of new user requests made in the the preceding few days. On July 26, Tea said more than 2.5 million new users have requested to join the application over the past week.
As interest in the application surged, so too did divisive discussions. Posts about Tea on social media sites such as X and Reddit have exploded in recent days, with debates raging in some threads about whether it invades men's privacy, while others have applauded the application as a way for women to protect each other from potentially dangerous or harmful men.
What was exposed in the Tea data breach?
The hack, which Tea said it discovered early on July 25, exposed tens of thousands of photos and other personal information from about 72,000 images. No email addresses or phone numbers were accessed, according to Tea, and the breach only affected users who signed up for the app before February 2024.
The company told USA TODAY on July 26 that they have "implemented additional security measures and have fixed the data issue." Tea added in a statement on its website that they have contacted law enforcement and are taking steps to "ensure the security of our platform and prevent further exposure."
Hackers were able to exploit Tea's data storage system to access where data was stored before Feb. 24, 2024, because "during our early stages of development some legacy content was not migrated into our new fortified system," according to the company's statement.
What to do if you could be impacted by the data breach
If you joined the app before February 2024 and are concerned about your drivers license information or other personal information being misused, you can find tips on the Federal Trade Commission's Identity Theft website.
Contributing: Mike Snider, USA TODAY
Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kapalmer@usatoday.com and on X @KathrynPlmr.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Reddit set to report Q2 earnings as Wall Street scrutinizes daily active user growth
Reddit set to report Q2 earnings as Wall Street scrutinizes daily active user growth

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Reddit set to report Q2 earnings as Wall Street scrutinizes daily active user growth

Reddit (RDDT) is set to report second quarter earnings after the bell Thursday as Wall Street scrutinizes how changes to Google Search's algorithm could affect the social media platform's daily active users, which fell below expectations in the US in the past two quarters. Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect Reddit to report earnings per share of $0.72, up from last year's loss per share of $0.06. They project the company's second quarter revenue to hit $425 million, up 50% from the prior year, according to Bloomberg data. Analysts expect global daily active users to climb 20% from the prior year to roughly 110 million for the period and US users to rise more than 9% to 50.5 million. Reddit shares sank following its quarterly reports in February and May despite earnings and revenue beating Wall Street's expectations, as changes to Google (GOOG) Search's algorithm created volatility in traffic to the site. Google accounts for 40% to 50% of Reddit's traffic, according to JPMorgan analyst Doug Anmuth, who holds a Neutral rating on the stock. Investors are concerned that Reddit's global daily active user growth is slowing. Daily active users (DAUs) increased 47% in the third quarter of 2024, 39% in the fourth quarter, and 31% in the first quarter of 2025. Following Reddit's first quarter results on May 1, CEO Steve Huffman spoke about the issue, saying that "given that the search ecosystem is under heavy construction, the near term could be more bumpy than usual." "[W]e expect the market to focus on the DAU trajectory, even if RDDT delivers another material beat on Revenue/EBITDA," Jefferies analyst John Colantuoni wrote in a note to investors Monday, maintaining his Buy rating on Reddit stock. Reddit shares have partly recovered losses earlier in the year, climbing roughly 70% from the stock's low of about $87 in early April. The stock spiked in June after the company launched new AI ad tools for marketers at the Cannes Lions Festival. Still, Reddit trades far below the highs above $220 seen in February before its fourth quarter earnings report, and shares are down nearly 10% in 2025. Analysts at Needham, Deutsche Bank, Jefferies, and Raymond James reiterated their Buy ratings on the stock in notes to clients in the days leading up to Reddit's report, as concerns over volatility in its traffic waned. "The bear case (that Google Search will no longer send traffic to RDDT) is not playing out," Needham analyst Laura Martin wrote. She added: "AI-driven ad tools ... suggest RDDT is already monetizing GenAI." Meanwhile, Jefferies' Colantuoni, citing web traffic data, said in a note that daily active user growth stabilized in the past three months after decelerating throughout the first quarter. Laura Bratton is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Bluesky @ Email her at Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Déjà vu? T-Mobile may be changing your plan whether you want it to or not
Déjà vu? T-Mobile may be changing your plan whether you want it to or not

Android Authority

time11 minutes ago

  • Android Authority

Déjà vu? T-Mobile may be changing your plan whether you want it to or not

Back in 2023, T-Mobile received a ton of flak for announcing it would soon forcibly switch some of its legacy customers to newer, more expensive plans. Within weeks, the company reversed its stance amid growing complaints, claiming the move had only been a test . Two years later, it seems the company is at it once again. Several T-Mobile customers have taken to Reddit to complain about a new email making the rounds. The message informs recipients of a plan change set to take effect on August 13. In short, affected customers will see their existing plan switched to Go5G Plus. At least this time it's clarified that the upgrade is 'at no extra cost.' I've contacted T-Mobile to learn more, but this appears to be more than just a rumor, as the company now has an official page on its website detailing the change. Diving into the various Reddit posts like the one from Formal_cut3811, here's what we know so far: The change is primarily targeting Magenta Max users, though several alleged T-Mobile employees claim that some T-Mobile One plans may also be affected. For example, a few customers with the One Plan and the ONE Plus promo have reported receiving the email. There's no official way to opt out of the change, though some users suggest T-Force support might be able to revert your account to a different plan after the switch. The alerts and emails indicate the upgrade will not change your monthly rate. T-Mobile says customers will keep all free lines, discounts, streaming perks, and any other benefits currently active. On paper, the upgrade doesn't sound so bad. For those with a plan like Magenta Max, you'll retain all the same perks while gaining better phone deals, more hotspot data, and a few other enhancements. The bigger concern is how this might affect customers with older versions of the Price Lock guarantee. It's very likely that existing Price Lock protections won't carry over—though that's just speculation for now.

First Came Tea. Then Came the Male Rage.
First Came Tea. Then Came the Male Rage.

Atlantic

time42 minutes ago

  • Atlantic

First Came Tea. Then Came the Male Rage.

Until last Thursday, the team behind the app Tea Dating Advice was having an extraordinary week. They claimed to have amassed more than 2 million new users, making Tea the most popular free app in Apple's App Store, after it stirred discussion on TikTok and Reddit. Women were using Tea, whose tagline is 'Helping women date safe,' in exactly the way they were supposed to: reviewing men they'd dated, giving them a 'green flag' or 'red flag' evaluation, seeking information on new prospects, running background checks to look for a criminal record or a sex-offender registration. But by Thursday evening, angry men had begun to amass online. They gathered on the anonymous messaging board 4chan, clamoring for a 'hack and leak' to publicly expose the app's users. On Friday morning, someone on 4chan posted a link leading to more than 70,000 images of Tea's users, including verification photos and pictures of government IDs, according to 404 Media, which first reported these events. Shortly afterward, someone created a map that claimed to link Tea users to locations and told anyone viewing it to 'enjoy'; another created a site for comparing and ranking the users' physical appearances. Posters across social-media platforms had a field day sharing Tea users' images, calling them 'whales' and 'ugly bitches,' saying that they deserved all of this. On Monday, 404 Media reported that a second data breach had revealed direct messages between users, including sensitive personal conversations, real names, social-media handles, and phone numbers. (A Tea representative told me that the company is investigating the issue and, having found that some messages were accessed in the breach, has taken their direct-messaging system offline. Tea has found no evidence of further exposures, she said, and is working to identify affected users and offer them free identity-protection services.) The whole episode, from start to finish, was horribly bleak—and also bleakly illuminating. Tea is hardly a perfect app. As its name suggests, it allows not only serious warnings about men but also gossip about their supposed defects and romantic tendencies. When Tea users do make serious allegations of predatory behavior, those accusations go unconfirmed, a glaring failure of due process. But for all of the app's flaws, the breaches have proved its users' concerns valid: Women had good reasons for wanting something like Tea in the first place. ____ Tea's emergence felt almost inevitable. Similar platforms have existed before: Consider Facebook groups such as 'Are We Dating the Same Guy?' (which have led to multiple lawsuits from men who were the subject of discussion) or an app called Lulu (which took down its man-reviewing feature in 2016 after facing criticism). Those digital whisper networks didn't exactly revolutionize dating safety. But by 2023, when Tea launched, American dating frustration had been mounting—perhaps especially for women. In 2019, Pew Research Center found that women were far more likely than men to say that dating had 'gotten harder for most people in the last 10 years.' The app had a ready audience, particularly among the many women who yearn for the era before apps, when a person was more likely to meet a romantic prospect through family or friends. That nostalgia isn't entirely misplaced: One real benefit of that courtship culture, researchers have told me, is that people are more likely to behave respectfully if they have mutual social connections who might hear how things go. Dating strangers, by contrast, involves a lack of accountability that may be more likely to lead to transgressions big and small, from ghosting and poor communication to sexual assault. On top of all that, women are looking for romance at a time when the U.S. government has been stripping away their reproductive rights, making pregnancy more perilous, and dismantling protections against gender discrimination. They're looking at a time of backlash to #MeToo and to the fact that women are relying less on men for financial security. They're looking as young men are moving further to the right politically, and when only 43 percent of Gen Z men say they'd consider themselves feminists —compared with 61 percent of Gen Z women. And they're looking as fear of sexual assault has grown. One doesn't need to have experienced assault, or to believe that every man poses a threat, to know that something in the culture has curdled, that caution is warranted. Tea arrived with good intentions. The actual product, unfortunately, isn't so great: It denies men the chance to defend themselves and—in some cases, surely—infringes on their privacy, publicizing their worst moments even when they might not make the same mistakes in the future. I would argue that the app isn't great for women, either. It's a sad approximation of what I think many really want: not strangers trashing other strangers online, but a return to a time when romantic prospects existed within a familiar context, when dating didn't feel quite so lonely. What Tea has accomplished, though, is showing what women are up against. The men so hell-bent on revenge against Tea's users are illustrating that hatred of women is alive and well. And the leaks demonstrated how insufficiently women are protected by the tech companies that shape their romantic lives. Tea's privacy policy promised that selfies used for verification would be 'deleted immediately' after authentication; the company then stored the photos in a way that left them so easy to access, 4chan users apparently didn't even need to break into anything. Tea was founded by a software engineer who said his mother had experienced 'terrifying' encounters with men who turned out to be using false identities on their dating profiles. What a terrible irony that after so many women, feeling unsafe, flocked to his app, it has now left thousands of them in potential danger. The first breach was awful: humiliating for the women who had to see their images passed around, and grim given the number of men making fun of those images with such open, gleeful cruelty. But news of the second breach, which reportedly exposed a larger amount of data with more identifying information, left a pit in my stomach. In more than 1.1 million private messages, women had told one another about rapes, opened up about abortions, identified cheaters. ('I am his wife,' one user wrote after saying she saw her husband being discussed on the app.) Some shared their phone numbers because, I imagine, they had made connections—because they needed support. When women realized they couldn't rely on the men in their life, they tried instead to rely on other women. In the end, misogyny got in the way of that too.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store