New Dating App For Trump Supporters Exposes Users’ Data On Launch Day

Donald Daters, a new app seeking to “make American date again” and address the needs of young Republicans who feel excluded from the liberal dating scene, has reportedly leaked users’ personal data immediately after the launch.

App creator Emily Moreno, a former campaign aide for Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL), launched the app because she felt Donald Trump supporters were “getting the short end of the stick” in the dating game.

“Support for the president has become a dealbreaker instead of an icebreaker,” she said. Moreno was inspired to create the app after hearing the story of a Trump supporter whose date ditched him after Googling his name and discovering his political leanings.

The new app ran into problems almost at the start, however. A French security researcher Robert Baptiste, going by the name ‘Elliot Alderson’ (a character from the TV show ‘Mr Robot’) has reportedly managed to download the entire DonaldDaters user database – including names, profile photos, private messages, even device type – because of a public Firebase data repository, according to TechCrunch.

Baptiste/Alderson also claimed to have gained access to account tokens that would allow him to take over users’ accounts. The data has since been made private and it is not known whether anyone else took advantage of the security flaw.

There’s clearly a market for conservative dating apps – more than 1,600 users had already signed up for DonaldDaters when the security flaw was reported. The app’s launch was favorably covered by the Daily Mail and Fox News, perhaps because one of the app’s promotional graphics read “Fox News and chill.”

A survey released last year by dating app Tinder revealed that 71 percent of dating app users consider political differences to be a “dealbreaker” in a potential match, and stories of Trump supporters facing rejection on dating apps are legion.

A previous Trump-themed dating app met with its own misfortunes. TrumpDating came under scrutiny when a Greensboro, NC paper pointed out the man in the couple featured on the app’s website was a convicted sex offender.


* This article was automatically syndicated and expanded from RT America.

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