Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Cybersecurity”
Tea App Data Breach: 72K Images Leaked to 4chan Alert
Breaking: Tea App Suffers Catastrophic Data Breach
Tea, a viral women-only dating safety app that recently topped Apple’s App Store charts, has suffered a major security breach that exposed over 72,000 user images to hackers. The leaked data, which includes 13,000 verification photos and government-issued IDs, was subsequently posted to the notorious 4chan message board on Friday morning.
The breach represents a devastating blow to an app specifically designed to provide a safe space for women to share information about men they encounter in the dating world. The irony of a women’s safety platform being compromised and having its users’ most sensitive data exposed to hostile online communities has sparked widespread concern about digital privacy and security.
SharePoint Security Alert: Critical Vulnerabilities 2025
Recent hours have brought a flurry of critical news highlighting a severe and ongoing cybersecurity crisis: on-premises Microsoft SharePoint vulnerabilities are under active global exploitation. This isn’t just a warning; it’s a confirmed reality impacting U.S. and state agencies, alongside research institutions worldwide.
Let’s break down the alarming reports that surfaced within the last 24 hours:
Chrome Zero-Day Vulnerabilities: Critical Alert 2025
Google Chrome users have faced a one-two punch of critical “zero-day” vulnerabilities in recent weeks. In the past two weeks (late June to early July 2025), Google scrambled to patch at least one major Chrome security flaw that attackers were actively exploiting before a fix was available - the very definition of a zero-day.
Browser AI Agents: New Cybersecurity Threats and Protection
Updated July 2025 | Based on public research and cybersecurity reports
What’s Going On?
As more companies integrate AI agents into their workflows, especially browser-based ones, new cybersecurity threats are emerging. Unlike human users, AI agents don’t hesitate. They don’t double-check suspicious links, verify site origins, or think twice before giving away permissions.
Recent findings from security researchers show that browser automation agents and AI-powered bots are exposing businesses to a new class of risks. Some even call them more dangerous than human employees when it comes to security hygiene.