Logo of Tea Dating Advice. Credit: Screenshot from Google Play In a contentious move to empower women in the dating world, the Tea app surged to the top of Apple’s U.S. App Store charts last week, allowing anonymous sharing of warnings about men’s “red flags”. The celebration was short-lived as hackers struck, leaking thousands of private images online and sparking outrage over digital safety. Tea Dating Advice Inc., based in San Francisco, swiftly confirmed the breach and enlisted cybersecurity pros to lock down their systems. They assured users that no emails or phone numbers were compromised, urging calm without password changes. Yet, critics argue this response highlights broader failures in safeguarding vulnerable data. The hack stemmed from an exposed legacy database, easily accessed by…

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