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 ...
A new app called Tea has rapidly become a viral sensation, as thousands of women use it to anonymously share candid reviews and warnings about men's behavior in the dating world. This women-only app, ...
A viral app called Neon, which offers to record your phone calls and pay you for the audio so it can sell that data to AI companies, has rapidly risen to the ranks of the top-five free iPhone apps ...
A new app has gone viral for asking its customers, “Are you dead?” After going viral, it’s now getting a name change. The Chinese mobile app originally known in English as “Are You Dead?” — translated ...
“Believe nothing. not even people’s runs,” a viral post on X reads. believe nothing. not even people's runspic.twitter.com/tvYjzZbhZF — Pedro Duarte ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Kate O’Flaherty is a cybersecurity and privacy journalist. Tea, the viral app that allows women to anonymously post images and ...
(NewsNation) — An app designed to help women spot “red-flag men” and catch cheaters is going viral. Tea, which markets itself as a dating safety app for women, has surged to the top of Apple’s U.S.
Women across social media are buzzing about Tea, an anonymous dating-safety app where they 'spill tea' — typically gossip, secrets and juicy information — on the men they're dating. But the app has ...
“Are you dead?” That’s the question a viral app has been trying to ask people who are living alone in China. The app is called Sileme in Chinese, which translates to “Are you dead?” in English, and it ...
When Cid Walker opens the Tea app, she’s greeted by a barrage of posts about men and their apparent "red" and "green" flags." "What clubs does he go to?" another person asked on a different post.