A popular "meat-market" smartphone app that spawned a sexual revolution in Australia's gay community has been compromised by a Sydney hacker, potentially exposing intimate personal chats, explicit photos and private information of users.
The location-aware Grindr app enables gay men to meet other gay men who may be just metres away, making use of their smartphone's Global Positioning System (GPS). It had about 100,000 Australian users as of August last year and more than one million users worldwide.
Now a hacker has pushed the app developer into a security crisis that has left its users seriously vulnerable considering the vast amounts of private information traded through the app - in many cases naked photos.
No information used on Grindr is personal anyway. It just asks for general information when you sign up. Only thing that may be remotely personal is images.
No information used on Grindr is personal anyway. It just asks for general information when you sign up. Only thing that may be remotely personal is images.
Don't people trade their phone numbers and addresses through the chats too.