logo
First Came Tea. Then Came the Male Rage.

First Came Tea. Then Came the Male Rage.

The Atlantic3 days ago
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.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Despite data breach, controversy, these women say Tea app is indispensable
Despite data breach, controversy, these women say Tea app is indispensable

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Despite data breach, controversy, these women say Tea app is indispensable

A week after Tea, a women's dating safety app, soared to No. 1 on the app store with more than 2.5 million requests to join, the app experienced a data breach. The result? More than 70,000 of user-submitted images used for photo identification and 59,000 more posts and comments were leaked. Tea is actively working with cybersecurity experts and law enforcement to support an investigation. Despite the widely-reported breach, Tea is currently No. 2 on the app store. Never heard of it? You're not alone but it's developed a passionate and dedicated following, especially among certain groups of women who say it makes them feel safer in an increasingly unpredictable online landscape. Tea allows women to anonymously discover "red flags" about men they're interacting with through crowdsourced updates, reverse image searches and background checks. The app also has a forum where women ask for advice. Critics say misinformation can run rampant in these anonymous discussions, but some women who've been in abusive relationships say the app is indispensable to them. It makes them feel safer. Jessica Mahoney signed up for Tea a few months ago. She had recently gotten out of a two-year-long abusive relationship and was ready to start dating again. As she scrolled through videos about how to spot narcissistic behavior and catch cheaters, she saw a woman mention Tea. Once she made an account and logged on, Mahoney posted about the new man she had met on Facebook. She was wary of getting involved with someone again. Not long after, three women replied to her thread and said that he invited each of them to his house, slept with them and then never talked to them again. 'It's all about overthinking and trying to protect myself," Mahoney explained. Her relationship with ex her left her feeling like she couldn't trust her intuition. When she looked at the app further, she saw a community of women who had similarly been in abusive relationships. One woman commented that the forum on the app helped her find out about sexual assault allegations against a man she met while walking her dog. Another woman said the Tea app allowed her a safe space to process her feelings after a drug dealer got her pregnant and disappeared. Another said when she posted about a man who assaulted her in 2022, she found out through the app that she wasn't the only one. At the same time, Mahoney was dealing with legal battles against her abusive ex-boyfriend. Temporary restraining orders, permanent restraining orders, insurance claims from her hospital visit and civil litigation took over her life. She said that such barriers often make domestic violence survivors feel silenced. The app was an outlet. Mahoney posted about her experiences with the legal system on the forum, saying that she felt like it was failing her. Others validated her experience in the comments section. Anonymous digital peer support is of 'huge value,' said Olivia Montgomery, services director at LifeWire, an organization that helps domestic violence survivors with housing, legal advocacy and resources. When survivors leave abusive relationships, she said, there is often a lack of trust in the legal system that creates a hesitation for them to engage, especially if they're a person of color. Additionally, abusers often isolate survivors from their friends and family, which minimizes opportunities for them to seek help or confide in other people. Survivors frequently worry that they won't be believed, even if they have physical evidence. 'I think that it's a safe space for expression,' Montgomery said of the Tea app. 'It creates a way that survivors can share their stories without that fear of exposure or backlash. They can hear from other people who have similar experiences, and that can be incredibly validating and help reduce that feeling of isolation.' She said Tea and similar platforms also allow survivors to engage at their own pace and on their own terms, choosing when and how much they share, which is empowering. In case you missed: Data breach causes dating app to take down messaging system Sarah Strauser is one of the many women on the app supporting domestic violence survivors. Her mission is rooted in her own experience as a survivor. When she was 18 years old, she got into a relationship with a man who was 10 years older than her and later turned abusive. She didn't realize what was going on at the time – no one she knew had been in an abusive relationship and she didn't know the signs. The relationship lasted five years. Once she broke up with him, his ex-girlfriends reached out to her sharing their own stories of abuse. Strauser, who is now 25, said that when she found out about the Tea app, she wanted to warn its users about him. But she also wanted to help other women experiencing abuse recognize the signs and leave abusive relationships, something she had to figure out on her own. 'There were a lot of things I didn't realize were abuse,' Strauser said. 'I'd be like, 'What am I doing wrong?' I've already seen a lot of posts about that there, about situations that I have been in. I'm like, 'Yeah, I know exactly what that feels like.' And I'm able to then be like, 'Hey, that happened to me. Please be careful. That's not a good situation.' ' Is 'the spark' a red flag? Sometimes. Experts say look for this in a relationship instead Mahoney has been sharing her healing journey as she recovers from the relationship. While her legal battle made her feel silenced, she said she found empowerment and encouragement by connecting with other women on the app. Now, she is the one giving advice to women who want to get out of similar situations. 'I want to try to be able to advocate with that sentiment, like, 'I know what you're going through,' being somebody that went through it and relived it and dealt with it and worked on herself,' Mahoney said. 'I understand, and I'm able to help, and be a voice of encouragement, a beacon of hope.' Strauser has a friend who also got out of a years-long abusive relationship recently. She told her friend about the Tea app, that it could be helpful to keep her safe. 'It's a scary world for women,' Strauser said. 'You never know who's going to be good, who's going to be bad. It feels good to have like-minded people in one space being able to support each other and give advice and comfort and care. There aren't a lot of safe places for women.' This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tea app, despite data breach, helps domestic violence survivors

Despite data breach, controversy, these women say Tea app is indispensable
Despite data breach, controversy, these women say Tea app is indispensable

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Despite data breach, controversy, these women say Tea app is indispensable

A week after Tea, a women's dating safety app, soared to No. 1 on the app store with more than 2.5 million requests to join, the app experienced a data breach. The result? More than 70,000 of user-submitted images used for photo identification and 59,000 more posts and comments were leaked. Tea is actively working with cybersecurity experts and law enforcement to support an investigation. Despite the widely-reported breach, Tea is currently No. 2 on the app store. Never heard of it? You're not alone but it's developed a passionate and dedicated following, especially among certain groups of women who say it makes them feel safer in an increasingly unpredictable online landscape. Tea allows women to anonymously discover "red flags" about men they're interacting with through crowdsourced updates, reverse image searches and background checks. The app also has a forum where women ask for advice. Critics say misinformation can run rampant in these anonymous discussions, but some women who've been in abusive relationships say the app is indispensable to them. It makes them feel safer. Jessica Mahoney signed up for Tea a few months ago. She had recently gotten out of a two-year-long abusive relationship and was ready to start dating again. As she scrolled through videos about how to spot narcissistic behavior and catch cheaters, she saw a woman mention Tea. Once she made an account and logged on, Mahoney posted about the new man she had met on Facebook. She was wary of getting involved with someone again. Not long after, three women replied to her thread and said that he invited each of them to his house, slept with them and then never talked to them again. 'It's all about overthinking and trying to protect myself," Mahoney explained. Her relationship with ex her left her feeling like she couldn't trust her intuition. When she looked at the app further, she saw a community of women who had similarly been in abusive relationships. One woman commented that the forum on the app helped her find out about sexual assault allegations against a man she met while walking her dog. Another woman said the Tea app allowed her a safe space to process her feelings after a drug dealer got her pregnant and disappeared. Another said when she posted about a man who assaulted her in 2022, she found out through the app that she wasn't the only one. At the same time, Mahoney was dealing with legal battles against her abusive ex-boyfriend. Temporary restraining orders, permanent restraining orders, insurance claims from her hospital visit and civil litigation took over her life. She said that such barriers often make domestic violence survivors feel silenced. The app was an outlet. Mahoney posted about her experiences with the legal system on the forum, saying that she felt like it was failing her. Others validated her experience in the comments section. Anonymous digital peer support is of 'huge value,' said Olivia Montgomery, services director at LifeWire, an organization that helps domestic violence survivors with housing, legal advocacy and resources. When survivors leave abusive relationships, she said, there is often a lack of trust in the legal system that creates a hesitation for them to engage, especially if they're a person of color. Additionally, abusers often isolate survivors from their friends and family, which minimizes opportunities for them to seek help or confide in other people. Survivors frequently worry that they won't be believed, even if they have physical evidence. 'I think that it's a safe space for expression,' Montgomery said of the Tea app. 'It creates a way that survivors can share their stories without that fear of exposure or backlash. They can hear from other people who have similar experiences, and that can be incredibly validating and help reduce that feeling of isolation.' She said Tea and similar platforms also allow survivors to engage at their own pace and on their own terms, choosing when and how much they share, which is empowering. In case you missed: Data breach causes dating app to take down messaging system Sarah Strauser is one of the many women on the app supporting domestic violence survivors. Her mission is rooted in her own experience as a survivor. When she was 18 years old, she got into a relationship with a man who was 10 years older than her and later turned abusive. She didn't realize what was going on at the time – no one she knew had been in an abusive relationship and she didn't know the signs. The relationship lasted five years. Once she broke up with him, his ex-girlfriends reached out to her sharing their own stories of abuse. Strauser, who is now 25, said that when she found out about the Tea app, she wanted to warn its users about him. But she also wanted to help other women experiencing abuse recognize the signs and leave abusive relationships, something she had to figure out on her own. 'There were a lot of things I didn't realize were abuse,' Strauser said. 'I'd be like, 'What am I doing wrong?' I've already seen a lot of posts about that there, about situations that I have been in. I'm like, 'Yeah, I know exactly what that feels like.' And I'm able to then be like, 'Hey, that happened to me. Please be careful. That's not a good situation.' ' Is 'the spark' a red flag? Sometimes. Experts say look for this in a relationship instead Mahoney has been sharing her healing journey as she recovers from the relationship. While her legal battle made her feel silenced, she said she found empowerment and encouragement by connecting with other women on the app. Now, she is the one giving advice to women who want to get out of similar situations. 'I want to try to be able to advocate with that sentiment, like, 'I know what you're going through,' being somebody that went through it and relived it and dealt with it and worked on herself,' Mahoney said. 'I understand, and I'm able to help, and be a voice of encouragement, a beacon of hope.' Strauser has a friend who also got out of a years-long abusive relationship recently. She told her friend about the Tea app, that it could be helpful to keep her safe. 'It's a scary world for women,' Strauser said. 'You never know who's going to be good, who's going to be bad. It feels good to have like-minded people in one space being able to support each other and give advice and comfort and care. There aren't a lot of safe places for women.'

July jobs report: AI is contributing to job cuts & slow hiring
July jobs report: AI is contributing to job cuts & slow hiring

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

July jobs report: AI is contributing to job cuts & slow hiring

The US added 73,000 jobs in July, a big miss from the 104,000 that economists were expecting. Unemployment also ticked up to 4.2% as estimated. The labor market data comes after a week of Big Tech earnings from Amazon (AMZN), Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Meta (META). Interactive Brokers chief strategist Steve Sosnick and Citi economist Veronica Clark join Morning Brief with Julie Hyman to discuss the numbers in the wake of Big Tech earnings and how impacts of artificial intelligence (AI) adoption are showing up in the labor data. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Morning Brief. So, this morning, we have three big stories that we are watching, obviously. The trade headlines coming out overnight, the jobs report which we just got, and then the other story that Jared Blickre just referred to, and that has to do with big tech. Apple, as you can see, rising in pre-market trading, Amazon falling after their numbers. So, let's talk more with the panel about that, and the sort of broader implications of tech in this economy. Veronica Clark, Leslie Falconio, Steve Sosnick, still with me now. Steve, I want to go to you first here because as of late, it seems like earnings have really taken precedence over some of these macro concerns. But as you said, there's been kind of a tone shift. So, you know, Microsoft and Meta hitting a market a couple days ago, that feels different from where we are this morning. So how are you thinking about Apple and Amazon, and sort of the tech trade in a market like this? Well, what a difference a day makes, right? I mean, this, you know, 24 hours ago, that was the story. It was how, you know, Meta and Microsoft were just roaring ahead. Today, it's a bit calmer. Part of it is, I think the, you know, the mental, the bar got set a bit higher after those two earnings reports. You know, in the case of Apple, the numbers look very good across the board in terms of, let's say, of iPhone revenues and things of that nature, though I think part of the enthuse, part of the reason we're not seeing a super enthusiastic reaction, nor did we last night, or right after the close, was that, you know, there's a, there's a fear that a lot of the, the iPhone extra revenue was brought forward from people who are nervous about tariffs. And I do know anecdotally, I know people who, who pushed forward their iPhone purchases because they didn't want to be exposed to the potential for having them go up 25% or more, a little bit later. So that, I think, might have helped, and that's kind of why the market, I think, is, is meandering there. In the case of Amazon, I think it's, you know, there's a lot of different factors because this company has so many different directions, but basically, you know, to the extent that, that one of the reasons that, that Alphabet and, and Microsoft did so well is their cloud revenues. And I think in the case of Amazon, it didn't necessarily keep pace. There was nothing in there to inspire people, and I think that's kind of, that's where Amazon is a bit more of a victim of, I'm not going to say irrational exuberance, but, but of the market's exuberance for the stocks that, that had come prior. And Veronica, I want to bring you in on, on sort of a related question here, which is the AI question. Because obviously, all these companies are reflective of this push into AI. Are we seeing that at all in jobs numbers, like we saw today? Or, you know, is the miss primarily a reflection of weakening economy, maybe even tariffs in some areas? Yeah, it's, it's really hard to pinpoint. Yesterday we got the Challenger job cut announcements, which always take those with a bit of a grain of salt, but they, they do look at job cuts by reason. And there was an increase in AI being the reason for some job cuts. But I think more, it might have to do with why hiring has been so low. I think it probably is also just a fundamentally weaker labor demand story. That's what high rates are supposed to do. But if AI is, you know, improving productivity, maybe if someone leaves, you're not replacing them. And a lot of this weakening in the labor market we've seen so far has been driven not by layoffs, but by very low hiring. And maybe AI would be part of that story. Related Videos Market in a 'reckoning period' with weak jobs data & tariff hikes Labor market is 'weakening' — rate cuts are 'back on the table' Jobs report sector breakdown: Healthcare wins, federal jobs lose US Adds 73,000 Jobs in July, Unemployment Rate Rises to 4.2% Sign in to access your portfolio

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