
An app called Quittr made $500,000 a month helping men quit porn.
It exposed 600,000 users’ most intimate data to anyone who knew where to look.
Here’s what was actually in that database:
- How often each user masturbates. Exact frequency. Logged.
- Personal “confessions” about their habits and urges
- Their specific triggers. Boredom. Stress. All of it.
- Their age. 1 in 6 of those users is a minor.
People shared all of this because they were trying to get better.
They trusted an app with their most vulnerable moments – and the app wasn’t ready for that responsibility.
That’s the real conversation we’re not having.
Not “how could they” – but how do we build products worthy of the trust people place in them when they’re at their most honest?
Sometimes, the most dangerous data you have isn’t your passwords. It can be as simple as what you typed while you were being honest.

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