Aeroflot, Russia and Hacker group
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"GMA" shares expert tips on how to stay safe while dating after Tea, the women-only app designed to make dating safer, became the target of a cyberattack.
Hackers have breached the Tea app, which recently went viral as a place for women to safely talk about men, and tens of thousands of women’s selfies and photo IDs have now seemingly been leaked online.
A program to share information with cybersecurity companies may have exposed unpatched flaws in the company’s SharePoint service.
Passwords, cryptocurrency keys, private messaging tokens, browser session data and more are open to any hacker willing to pay just $30 a month.
The company said state-backed hacking groups were breaching systems through flaws in SharePoint, which is used by the U.S. government and companies around the world.
Hackers in recent weeks have exploited flaws in SharePoint, a document management system developed by Microsoft Corp., to try to steal sensitive data from hundreds of victims.
Christina Chapman, a 50-year-old Arizona woman, has just been sentenced to 102 months in prison for helping North Korean hackers steal US identities in order to get "remote" IT jobs with more than 300 American companies, including Nike. The scheme funneled millions of dollars to the North Korean state.
A dating safety app that allows women to do background checks on men and anonymously share "red flag" behaviour has been hacked, exposing thousands of members' images, posts and comments. Tea Dating Advice, a US-based women-only app with 1.6 million users, said there had been "unauthorised access" to 72,000 images submitted by women.
EADaily, July 28th, 2025. Reports of attacks on Aeroflot servers by hacker groups are quite alarming. This was announced today, July 28, by the press secretary of the President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Peskov,
Wagenius was an active-duty US soldier stationed at bases in South Korea and Texas. In 2024, he helped hack telecom companies and obtained call record data on Donald Trump and Kamala Harris, which he posted in November under the "kiberphant0m" name.