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TeaOnHer Fixes Major Data Leak but Leaves Users Uninformed

Newville Media patched backend flaws that exposed driver’s licenses and private chats with no public confirmation of user notifications.

a speckled photo of the TeaOnHer app
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Overview

  • Security researchers say trivial API flaws in TeaOnHer exposed thousands of driver’s licenses, selfies, emails and private messages until a fix was deployed roughly one week after TechCrunch’s disclosure.
  • The app’s developer, Newville Media Corporation, has neither commented publicly on the breach nor indicated that affected users have been notified, raising transparency and accountability concerns.
  • The original Tea app continues to cooperate with an FBI inquiry and consolidated class-action litigation after earlier leaks of about 72,000 ID images and 1.1 million messages forced it to disable direct messaging.
  • Privacy advocates and security experts warn that the rapid, copycat launches of both Tea and TeaOnHer highlight systemic risks from virality-driven development and insufficient data controls.
  • Questions are growing about compliance with Apple App Store disclosure rules after TeaOnHer required government ID verification while its listing claimed no user data collection.