A few days later, the male Teaonher App commented on the hacker of a woman
First, drink tea and then overflow.
A few weeks after hackers brushed user data from the tea app (a “Rating Your Pre-Rating App where women can exchange dirt on DUD dates), its testosterone-fueled twin Teanher suffered the same fate.
The Viral Gossip Center is known as a “safety” tool that allows women to exchange stories about fool dates and potential predators – with undercover call, ID verification, digital lookup and photo detectives to reveal fake profiles.
But after a quiet boil for a year, the app boiled in July 2025, landing in Apple’s top three downloads.
Teanher launched the Impossible Time last month, which was shot on the list next to the sister app and took a chart next to its sister app.
The hacker drank tea in July, swiped private chat and ID snapshots as 404 media, and posted them on 4chan. Last week, Slueths followed Teaonher’s example.
TechCrunch said reporters entered the sensitive hiding within minutes, thanks to the admin panel being so spacious that they didn’t even require a login.
On August 14, an X user weighed the way hackers broke, writing: “Teaonher, an app designed to fight the infamous “Teaapp” is also a huge dumpster fire. It has been compromised.”
“The developer publishes the password to the admin panel ‘password1!’. It is stored in plain text on the landing page. f-k.”
NBC News wrote that both Tea and Teanher may be staring at the user’s class action lawsuit.
Since the original Tea app was broken, the R/tech red app has been baking Teanher to provide the same sloppy security.
As Daily Point reported, one user wrote: “Wait, so they saw the first app being “hacked” and decided, let’s store user information with the same negligence?”
Some people even wonder if the hacker is aiming to outing these people using the app.
One tweeted: “This is just a revenge project made by the original, is the only intention to attract some people?”
As the post previously reported, the initial tea app has left people in a cold sweat instead of over-forgotten their wallets.
Users baked EXES anonymously and warned that as the app climbed the rough date of App Store charts, a fierce clash between digital security and online spam talk was sparked.
Tiktokker @Azalialexi noted in a recent video: “I saw this tea app being frightened by this tea app today.”
“If you don’t want something like this to exist, maybe consider advocating women’s safety and actually keeping your men accountable.”
This week, tiktok user @ninadoesthost observed that many women use tea apps “exposed those who are doing it” [domestic violence] Maybe there is a restriction order, or a man with a secret child “not showing up”.
But men will join Teaonher “for different reasons.” “They are green marking which girls are easy or good in bed,” she claimed.
Others, however, fear that the concepts of both apps spanned a comprehensive digital vigilance. User @David.serna.cadena warns viewers on Tiktok to “be careful”.
He added that he could see the “vision” behind the OG Tea App, but stressed that he knew “how mean” people might use it.
Another wrote: “Hot: Tea apps are toxic,” he sent a female friend to secretly and sneakily tell the woman’s comments on him.
“These women are obviously frustrated…I am honest and respectful to them.”
Whether it is tea or tea, one thing is clear: in the battle between digital soil and privacy, no one is unscathed.

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