The woman, who was reportedly suffering postpartum depression, allegedly set up the deal through her boyfriend, who is not the father of the child.?
The leaked files include photos used for verification, photos removed by app moderators, and photos sent in direct messages between users - many of which were explicit.These sensitive snaps were being stored online without password protection, meaning anyone with the link could view and download them.

Researchers from Cybernews, who discovered the vulnerability, say this easily exploited security flaw put up to 900,000 users at risk of further hacks or extortion.A spokesman for M.A.D Mobile told MailOnline they were 'confident that none of the images were downloaded by malicious actors' and that the issue has now been resolved.However, the developer is still not entirely certain why such critically sensitive user information was left entirely unprotected.

M.A.D Mobile is 'currently conducting an internal investigation' but it believes the issue stemmed from 'a simple human error'.Cybersecurity experts have issued an urgent warning after almost 1.5 million private images from BDSM and LGBT dating apps were exposed online. Images like this (blurred to preserve privacy) were available to anyone with access to a publicly available link?

The code of the app BDSM People (pictured) led to an unsecured storage location containing 1.6 million files and over 128GB of data.?Among those files were 541,000 photos users had sent to each other or uploaded to the app, including a large number of explicit images
Ethical hacker Aras Nazarovas, who discovered the security vulnerability, told MailOnline he was 'shocked' that such obviously private messages were publicly accessible.But a source familiar with trade negotiations told the Telegraph there should be 'no free trade without free speech'.
It comes as Sir Keir has been attempting to strike a deal with the US since Donald Trump announced tariffs on 'all countries'.A phone call between the two leaders over the weekend saw No 10 concede on Monday the financial charges would likely hit Britain.
It is not the first time a US body has criticised the UK over free speech in recent months as during Sir Keir's visit to Washington last month, Vice President JD Vance explicitly confronted the prime minister, saying there are 'infringements on free speech' in the UK.Britain's Keir Starmer previously discussed 'productive negotiations' towards a UK-US 'economic prosperity deal', No10 said (pictured together February 27)

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