Tea app lets women review their dates. Men are worried.
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A dating advice app that lets women anonymously review their dates and compare notes has surged in popularity.
Apple has expanded its age-rating system to include 13+, 16+, and 18+ ratings, in addition to the existing ratings for younger users.
Apple has announced an overhaul of the App Store's age rating system across all of its platforms. The company has added three new age
Tea, an app where women can swap information about men, went viral this week, riding a flood of attention on social media. It soon rocketed to the No. 1 slot in the Apple App Store’s lifestyle category, and then, promptly, the app was hacked.
BiteSight is a food-delivery app that lets users watch videos of food before ordering. It also lets customers see what their friends have ordered and bookmark places to try out.
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Apple's changes to its App Store rules and fees will likely secure the green light from EU antitrust regulators, people with direct knowledge of the matter said, a move that would stave off potentially hefty daily fines for the iPhone maker.
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Primetimer on MSNIs the Tea app legal and who is the founder? Entire data breach controversy explained
The application found itself atop Apple’s App Store earlier this week after hordes of new users signed up to the app.
404 Media first reported on the data breach, writing that users from 4chan “claim to have discovered an exposed [Tea] database hosted on Google’s mobile app development platform, Firebase.” The notorious site’s resident trolls bragged that they were parsing personal data and selfies from the app’s internal databases.