A data breach exposed photos and ID cards of women who signed up for a fast-growing app for women to share details of men they might date.

The app, which is designed to protect women from bad dates, has now exposed their identities following a major hack.

Thousands of women registered with Tea have had their images illegally accessed, the US firm says.

A data breach exposed photos and ID cards of women who signed up for a fast-growing app for women to share details of men they might date.

Tea, an app that allows women to post anonymous comments about men they’ve supposedly dated, announced Friday that it has suffered a data breach, with hackers gaining access to…

Tea, a dating safety app which allows women to anonymously give men red or green \

After last week’s hack, the app has been breached again.

Una filtración de fotos de las usuarias de la aplicación Tea, que sirve para valorar anónimamente a los hombres, expone los nuevos riesgos de internet

"Out of an abundance of caution, we have taken the affected system offline," the app said. “At this time, we have found no evidence of access to other parts of our environment.”