Close Menu
CrypThing
  • Directory
  • Slot
  • News
    • AI
    • Press Release
    • Altcoins
    • Memecoins
  • Analysis
  • Price Watch
  • Price Prediction
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads
CrypThingCrypThing
  • Directory
  • Slot
  • News
    • AI
    • Press Release
    • Altcoins
    • Memecoins
  • Analysis
  • Price Watch
  • Price Prediction
CrypThing
Home»News»Tea App That Claimed to Protect Women Exposes 72,000 IDs in Epic Security Fail
News

Tea App That Claimed to Protect Women Exposes 72,000 IDs in Epic Security Fail

adminBy adminJuly 26, 20254 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link Bluesky Reddit Telegram WhatsApp Threads
Tea App That Claimed to Protect Women Exposes 72,000 IDs in Epic Security Fail
Share
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Bluesky Reddit Telegram WhatsApp

In brief

Hackers leaked 72,000+ selfies, IDs, and DMs from Tea’s unsecured database.
The private info of women using the app is now searchable and spreading online.
The original leaker said lax “vibe coding” may have been one of the reasons why the app was left wide open to attack.

The viral women-only dating safety app Tea suffered a massive data breach this week after users on 4chan discovered its backend database was completely unsecured—no password, no encryption, nothing.

The result? Over 72,000 private images—including selfies and government IDs submitted for user verification—were scraped and spread online within hours. Some were mapped and made searchable. Private DMs were leaked. The app designed to protect women from dangerous men had just exposed its entire user base.

The exposed data, totaling 59.3 GB, included:

13,000+ verification selfies and government-issued IDs
Tens of thousands of images from messages and public posts
IDs dating as recently as 2024 and 2025, contradicting Tea’s claim that the breach involved only “old data”

4chan users initially posted the files, but even after the original thread was deleted, automated scripts kept scraping data. On decentralized platforms like BitTorrent, once it’s out, it’s out for good.

From viral app to total meltdown

Tea had just hit #1 on the App Store, riding a wave of virality with over 4 million users. Its pitch: a women-only space to “gossip” about men for safety purposes—though critics saw it as a “man-shaming” platform wrapped in empowerment branding.

One Reddit user summed up the schadenfreude: “Create a women-centric app for doxxing men out of envy. End up accidentally doxxing the women clients. I love it.”

Verification required users to upload a government ID and selfie, supposedly to keep out fake accounts and non-women. Now those documents are in the wild.

The company told 404 Media that “[t]his data was originally stored in compliance with law enforcement requirements related to cyber-bullying prevention.”

Decrypt reached out but has not received an official response yet.

The culprit: ‘Vibe coding’

Here’s what the O.G. hacker wrote. “This is what happens when you entrust your personal information to a bunch of vibe-coding DEI hires.”

“Vibe coding” is when developers type “make me a dating app” into ChatGPT or another AI chatbot and ship whatever comes out. No security review, no understanding of what the code actually does. Just vibes.

Apparently, Tea’s Firebase bucket had zero authentication because that’s what AI tools generate by default. “No authentication, no nothing. It’s a public bucket,” the original leaker said.

It may be vibe coding, or simply poor coding. Regardless, the overreliance on generative AI is only increasing.

This isn’t some isolated incident. Earlier in 2025, the founder of SaaStr watched its AI agent delete the company’s entire production database during a “vibe coding” session. The agent then created fake accounts, generated hallucinated data, and lied about it in the logs.

Overall, researchers from Georgetown University found 48% of AI-generated code contains exploitable flaws, yet 25% of Y Combinator startups use AI for their core features.

So even though vibe coding is effective for occasional use, and tech behemoths like Google and Microsoft pray the AI gospel claiming their chatbots build an impressive part of their code, the average user and small entrepreneurs may be safer sticking to human coding—or at least review the work of their AIs very, very heavily.

“Vibe coding is awesome, but the code these models generate is full of security holes and can be easily hacked,” computer scientist Santiago Valdarrama warned on social media.

Vibe-coding is awesome, but the code these models generate is full of security holes and can be easily hacked.

This will be a live, 90-minute session where @snyksec will build a demo application using Copilot + ChatGPT and live hack it to find every weak spot in the generated…

— Santiago (@svpino) March 17, 2025

The problem gets worse with “slopsquatting.” AI suggests packages that don’t exist, hackers then create those packages filled with malicious code, and developers install them without checking.

Tea users are scrambling, and some IDs already appear on searchable maps. Signing up for credit monitoring may be a good idea for users trying to prevent further damage.

Generally Intelligent Newsletter

A weekly AI journey narrated by Gen, a generative AI model.

app Claimed Epic Exposes Fail IDs protect security Tea Women
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link Bluesky WhatsApp Threads
Previous ArticleEthereum ETFs Massively Outpace Bitcoin Funds—Why ETH Demand Is Surging
Next Article AI referrals to top websites were up 357% year-over-year in June, reaching 1.13B
admin

Related Posts

Clearpool secures $400K XPL funding from Plasma for PayFi growth

October 7, 2025

Gold set to surpass $4,000 per ounce amid booming retail demand

October 6, 2025

World Liberty Financial sells tokens to Hut8 for treasury reserves at $0.25 each

October 5, 2025
Trending News

The last call before the lift off? Dogecoin coil for important breakouts

October 3, 2025

How To Use A Bitcoin Heatmap For Smarter Trading Decisions

October 2, 2025

SK Planet Acquires MOCA Coin for Decentralized Identity Integration

October 2, 2025

Horizen (ZEN) gains 12% to break above $7

October 1, 2025
About Us

At crypthing, we’re passionate about making the crypto world easier to (under)stand- and we believe everyone should feel welcome while doing it. Whether you're an experienced trader, a blockchain developer, or just getting started, we're here to share clear, reliable, and up-to-date information to help you grow.

Don't Miss

Reporters found that Zerebro founder was alive and inhaling his mother and father’ home, confirming that the suicide was staged

May 9, 2025

Openai launches initiatives to spread democratic AI through global partnerships

May 9, 2025

Stripe announces AI Foundation model for payments and introduces deeper Stablecoin integration

May 9, 2025
Top Posts

The last call before the lift off? Dogecoin coil for important breakouts

October 3, 2025

How To Use A Bitcoin Heatmap For Smarter Trading Decisions

October 2, 2025

SK Planet Acquires MOCA Coin for Decentralized Identity Integration

October 2, 2025
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
© 2025 crypthing. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.