Women are anonymously spilling tea about men in their cities on viral app - The surveillance state equivalent of the mean girls burn book

When Cid Walker opens the Tea app, she’s greeted by a barrage of posts about men and their apparent "red" and "green" "flags."

“He’s a cheater,” Walker said, reading some of the comments on one post out loud.

"What clubs does he go to?" another person asked on a different post. "He’s cute."

The app, which appears to have been advertising itself online since at least last fall, allows users to solicit feedback about specific men they’re dating.

Walker, 22, is among the 4 million users on the women-only safety app, which this week became the No. 1 free app in the Apple App Store.

It picked up viral traction in the last month after some people began talking about it online on Reddit and TikTok. The app gained more than 900,000 new signups in the last few days, Tea said on social media. Getting off the waitlist can now take days, an inconvenience many new users complained about in comments on the app's Instagram posts.

Upon opening Tea, users are presented with local men whose photos have been uploaded, along with their first names. For each of the men, other women on the app can report whether they deem him a “red flag” or a “green flag” and leave comments about him, such as those recounting negative date experiences or vouching for him as a friend.

“I’ve seen so many people I know on the app, it’s crazy,” said Walker, a Cleveland-area user who joined the app last week after having seen multiple viral posts about it. “Like, oh my God, I would never think all this stuff about them.”

App users can look up individual names in the search bar or create custom alerts for specific men. The app also offers functions that let users run background checks, search for criminal histories and reverse-search photos to check whether a man is catfishing by using someone else’s photos on his dating profile.

The woman-only app was created by a man, Sean Cook, who said on Tea’s website that he was inspired after he watched his mother’s “terrifying experience with online dating,” including being catfished and unknowingly dating men with criminal records.

Cook’s profile on LinkedIn lists him as the founder of Tea since 2022. The description under his role says, “Tea was self-funded by Sean.”

Cook did not respond to a request for comment. A representative for Tea said the app isn’t offering interviews at this time.

Tea’s mission mirrors similar efforts that have gained popularity in other online forums, such as “Are We Dating The Same Guy?,” a Facebook community with millions of members across the country in localized offshoots.

While the communities have stated that their mission is to keep women safe, they have also faced backlash from men online who say they fear being misrepresented or doxxed on the platforms.

The Facebook groups, which advertise themselves as spaces for women to warn other women about “liars, cheaters, abusers, or anyone who exhibits any type of toxic or dangerous behavior,” have for years been criticized online for devolving into places for gossip or for spreading possible misinformation about people. Last year, judges dismissed two defamation lawsuits filed in Illinois and California by men who were posted in the groups.

With Tea, some men have posted in forums asking for others to report the app in hope of getting it shut down, and others have expressed interest in a men-only equivalent on which they could discuss and mock women.

One app has already tried to offer that. The Teaborn app climbed to No. 3 in the free apps chart Wednesday before it disappeared from the App Store.

Shortly ahead of its removal, the app had rolled out an update with “enhanced content moderation and reporting tools” after its creator condemned users for allegedly sharing revenge porn on the platform.

Teaborn told NBC News in a social media statement: “Apple just removed us yesterday because Tea app doesn’t like competition, but we are working to go back with a new brand!”

Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Despite finding apps like Tea entertaining, users like Walker have expressed discomfort with the idea of allowing so many people to anonymously speak negatively about others online.

Signing up for Tea requires users to take selfies, which the app says are deleted after review, to prove they are women. All users who get accepted are anonymous outside of the usernames they choose. Screenshots are also blocked.

On its website, Tea describes itself as “more than an app; it’s a sisterhood.” The app claims it donates 10% of its profits to the National Domestic Violence Hotline.

A spokesperson for the hotline didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.

“Together, we’re redefining modern dating,” the app says.

Walker said that she has noticed many users focus more on gossip than real safety concerns but that she believes some people have found Tea useful for exposing serious issues like abuse.

“I feel like if people were to use the app how it’s supposed to be used, this could actually save a lot of women from being hurt or harmed,” Walker said. “But at this point, I think it’s like a joke to everybody and just like cyberbullying.”



 
If this was true white women would be fighting each other to date pakis and vantablack niggers from countries where treating women like cattle is legal yet in reality they are the demographic least likely to race mix (and men’s delusions to the contrary is /pol/ and mindgeek induced psychosexual obsession projected onto women as a defence mechanism).
You're hurting yourself in your confusion. I said women are attracted to dangerous men. You know, the way they fantasize about inmates and serial killers, how they listen to true crime podcasts and read vampire smut. You don't like that reference apparently, so you're trying to shift the topic to race or whatever. It failed. Your attempt didn't work at all
 
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this hag is 70 years old, what is she doing on this app??
"She ams a GMILF."
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it's unironically no different than what we do here on the farms.
It is unironically very different.

Nobody in that application is posting proof or archives or showing publicly accesible info to legitimize their character assasination, complete opposite of the standards the Kiwi Farms has.

Gossiping anonymously isn't the problem. It is the fact that the "gossiping" is deliberately malicious and also baseless, while attaching faces and names to it.
 
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It is unironically very different.

Nobody in that application is posting proof or archives or showing publicly accesible info to legitimize their character assasination, complete opposite of the standards the Kiwi Farms has.

Gossiping anonymously isn't the problem. It is the fact that the "gossiping" is deliberately malicious and also baseless, while attaching faces and names to it.
Wasn't the app originally supposed to be for reporting bad date experiences for prospective flings? I support that use case, but what the fuck kind of evidence would you want for that? Women to film the entire date from start to finish and post it online like 'oh, here's proof he's a shit dude who left me with the bill' or whatever.

They should have definitely had some sort of moderation system that was better implimented so that it didn't result in shitflinging for no reason, but I definitely see the use for an app like this.

The fuck would I know, though?
 
Literally look at any of the BP crowd. They are the 'terfs' you speak of and not a one of them distinguishes who gets the blame for nigger / pajeet behaviour. It's just men who are rapists when Muzzy grooming gangs and Mexican sex traffickers pull their shit.
.... correct. Try pattern recognition, muzzie and shitskin women don't rape, you stupid dicknigger.
 
The Tea app seems to have been vibe coded and the infamous hacker known as 4chan has compromised the public KYC buckets
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It gets oh so much worse.

The complete lack of OPSEC is astounding. The ramifications of this incident will be felt for many, many months. :story:

Btw, I've heard through the grapevine that many eastern European women (i.e. Russian and Ukrainian) women already have their super sekrit Telegram channels where they do the same, they gather 'round and gossip about the dudes who they are dating, especially if they are expats living abroad.

Come to think of it, that might just be slightly more secure than this piece-of-shit app.
 
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There's a guy on pornhub who reviews what it feels like to put your penis in a fleshlight filled with various food items. Men will fuck anything
Leaving aside how it is you know that, men won’t fuck ‘anything’ until he fucks a fleshlight filled with crushed uncooked ramen and rock salt. Mmmmm, zingy.
 
There are definitely still good women out there. But they sure as fuck aren't in online dating apps.

The main issue is that certain groups have managed to damage the viability of the usual long-term dating scenes (School, Work, Church, Sports, ect) and tried to replace them with short-term, hookup dating scenes (Dating apps, Social Media, the "Bar Scene", ect)
There are very few places where people used to meet that are still open to letting people meet amd flirt. Someone a while back (perhaps @The Ugly One ?) posted a graph of ‘where I met my spouse’ over time and it’s basically’church/family/community’ giving way to ‘work’ and then ‘online.’
All the irl places have built in vetting because people around you know the potential suitor. They will give you that feedback. He’s nice, just shy. Avoid him, he has a temper, etc.
Online has none of that. Online is full of hook ups, people you have no idea about. And you choose on different criteria. IRL maybe that girl was a bit homely but lovely, but online it’s just a photo and some labels you’re choosing on. So it not only skews who you meet, it skews the criteria you pick on and removes rhe safety settings
 
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