Tea app data breach
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The Tea app was intended to help women date safely. Then it got hacked.
Tea, a dating discussion app that recently suffered a high-profile cybersecurity breach, announced late Monday that some direct messages were also accessed in the incident.
The Tea app data breach has spiraled into online harassment, with leaked user photos reportedly used in a rating site and an unverified map. Experts say this wasn’t a hack—but a major security failure.
A previously disclosed hack affecting Tea, a women-only dating advice app, was more extensive than previously thought, the company said Monday. Tea's investigation of the incident found that app users' direct messages had been breached,
Tea Dating Advice allows women to vet their dates, using crowdsourced information and public records to evaluate men.
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Last week, social network Tea experienced a data breach that exposed personal information for its users. The dating safety app for women said at the time that "there is no evidence to suggest that current or additional user data was affected.
The viral app Tea, where women are invited to review the men in their lives, has just suffered a second data breach. According to the company, last week's breach included data that was two years old.
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?
L-theanine, an amino acid found in green tea, may help reduce stress, improve sleep quality, and support cognitive performance in healthy adults. Evidence from clinical studies shows it is safe and well-tolerated,
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The Takeout on MSNThe Type Of Tea You Need To Make The Best Copycat McDonald's Sweet TeaThere's no better drive-thru porch-sipper than McDonald's Sweet Tea, but you can brew a copycat version with plenty of sugar and Mickey D's go-to tea blend.