The Tea has been spilled

It appears people are spilling the tea — or at least someone else has done it for them.

There’s a very popular app that you might not have even heard of, called The Tea App, ..it was marketed as a space for women to anonymously post so-called “red flags” about men in their neighborhood or city. These posts could include anything from bad dates to serious accusations — and others could comment, rate, or agree with the information to help women “stay safe.” Sounds like a digital whisper network. But here’s the twist: the entire thing just got hacked.

And not a small leak either — the whole thing has been exposed.

We’re talking photo IDs, driver’s licenses, selfies, private chats, post images, and account data, all now dumped across the internet. The hack was so complete that even the folks over at 4chan reportedly mapped out the locations of many of the women who posted. According to ongoing threads and commentary, it also turns out that some of the women may have lied about the men they posted about. And now, those lies are out there too — along with the real stories, mixed into the same wreckage.

Just think about what that means. This was supposed to be a private, anonymous space for women to share warning signs and protect others. The app even blocked the men being posted about from seeing what was said — they didn’t even know they were being talked about. But that same app, which asked users to submit deeply personal information to “verify” their identity — including selfies and government IDs — has now had all of that information thrown online for everyone to see.

The Tea App promised anonymity. What it delivered was a digital time bomb.

Tea released a statement saying they detected “unauthorized access” to their systems and admitted that about 72,000 images had been exposed — including 13,000 photo IDs and verification selfies. They also confirmed that 59,000 user-shared images from posts, DMs, and comments were accessed. But I’m sorry — if you’ve been watching what’s happening on Reddit and 4chan, you already know this hack appears far more extensive and far more dangerous than what the company is admitting. This might go down as one of the most disturbing breaches we’ve seen in a long time.

Think about the worst-case scenarios for a second. What if a woman used the app to call out a man who really was dangerous — a rapist, a stalker, a predator? Now she’s been exposed, and her location is mapped. But on the flip side, what if someone just wanted to get back at an ex or start a rumor? That’s out there too — and the man they accused may never have even known until now. No one wins in this mess.

And here’s the bigger question: is an app like this even legal? Sure, free speech exists — but what about defamation of character? What about due process? What about lies? The Tea App was built on anonymity, but that same anonymity became a weapon. And now the weapon’s been turned inside out, aimed at both the people who posted and the people who were posted about.

But the sickest, most twisted part of all of this is that people trusted this app. They trusted that what they were saying .. and who they were ..  would stay private. It shot to the top of the Apple download charts in 2023, gained traction fast, and then snap … hacked. Just like that. Another reminder that true privacy doesn’t exist online. We’re still living under the illusion that we can post in secret, that our DMs are private, that an app won’t sell us out or leave the door unlocked.

But we need to wake up. Because the internet has never been private. And now the tea is out, burning everyone it touches.