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Reincarnatedwolfgod

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Jan 17, 2011
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these things unfortunately happen. I think it is kinda idiotic to take said pictures of yourself but some people don't know that company's can fail at security and others are fully aware that.

In terms of blame I would say if you where not aware of the risk then you have zero blame. from that point on you know learned companies host said sevive can's be rely on to keep it private and one must take matter in there own hands. the most effective way doing that is not taking nude pictures of your self, which is the foolproof method of preventing new self taken nude pictures from ever being leaked. said foolproof method would have prevented from being a victim of a leak for self taken photos in the first place but, the past can only be learned from. once you know the risk of what your getting into, it includes fully acknowledging how it can backfire on you. If you knew the risk and still took nude pictures of your self anyway and they get leaked some how then said person get a bit of the blame. in my book it's in the form of slightly less sympathy when compared to a person who did no know any better.

most or all of the blame depending on if one knew risk of there actions is between to the company who are responsible for keeping the private data secure and the assholes that made the picture leak happen.
 

bjj hero

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Feb 4, 2009
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Baffle said:
I'm generally appalled by the whole thing (the distribution of other people's nudes, not people actually taking their own nudes). I have, however, uploaded a significant number of close-ups of my nutsack in the hope that I'll leak (gross!) and I'll be able to get on Celebrity Big Brother with my leaked nutsack. It's just so .... sacky.
Smooth or natural?

Those saying why would you do that have never been in a relationship where you spend time apart.
The blame is fully on the hackers. Its a shame that so many people want to blame the the victim when crimes involve sex and women.
 

Verlander

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Apr 22, 2010
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Why do it? It's fun and kinky, and something that people share with each other. I have no problem with people doing it, good for them.
 

Simskiller

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Oct 13, 2010
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Matthew Jabour said:
Hey op. Update the first post to correct and say it was third party applications, like Snapsave that got compromised. Not snapchat it self.

Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/the-snappening-4chan-hacker-to-leak-thousands-of-nude-snapchat-images--but-is-it-a-hoax-9788218.html

In a statement, Snapchat said it was not hacked, instead pointing the finger at third party applications such as Snapsave.

It said: ?We can confirm that Snapchat?s servers were never breached and were not the source of these leaks. Snapchatters were victimized by their use of third-party apps to send and receive Snaps, a practice that we expressly prohibit in our Terms of Use precisely because they compromise our users? security.

?We vigilantly monitor the App Store and Google Play for illegal third-party apps and have succeeded in getting many of these removed.?
This took 1 google search to get a news article and some info on the leak.
 

Artaneius

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Dec 9, 2013
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LarsInCharge said:
Matthew Jabour said:
Why? What compels a person to take a picture of themselves naked? Surely, if you wish for someone else to view your naked body, you could show them the real thing?

Now, that's perfectly okay, there's no law against being weird, but why store them in unsafe places? Don't get me wrong, it's a sex crime to leak these things, but I would think, after taking a nude photo, you might put a little effort into concealing it? Because everyone should know by now, the digital world is not very secure.

When it was just the iCloud, that was reasonable. You have to store your photos somewhere, and it's not unreasonable to assume they would be safe with Apple. But now Snapchat? Come on, who could ever think that would be a safe place to store lewd photos?

Now, I won't lie: I have some photos on my phone that I would not like to see the light of day. But I put effort into making sure they don't see daylight. People are entitled to privacy, but in this day and age, you have to put some work towards that goal. Use some common sense, just like with those folders on your desktop marked 'stuff'. And unless you absolutely need to - say, for example, to draw in a yardstick for comparison - don't use Snapchat.
My friends (who were dating at the time) swapped nude pics for when they weren't able to see each other for long periods of time. So I understand why people do it.

The thing is, they have every right to do it and expect those images to be protected (especially since this is another case of them deleting the images and the site storing them anyway).
I forgot which supreme court case decided this. But it has been confirmed from the supreme court that rights can be taken away with due cause
LarsInCharge said:
PdYyP1iWeJaWBnlafPe4 said:
LarsInCharge said:
The thing is, they have every right to do it [...]
That's the best part of a free country!

LarsInCharge said:
[...] and expect those images to be protected (especially since this is another case of them deleting the images and the site storing them anyway).
If you post something on Facebook, and then delete it later (say, 1 week from now), is it deleted? Are you sure? Do you know their tape backup procedure? Do you know their restoral process and how they account for deleted users?

If not, how can you say you expect these things to be deleted? Or is on a misunderstanding of what the internet is? If so, shouldn't more effort be put into educating users about how the internet works rather than demonizing security flaws that are bound to happen thanks to development by human beings?

-----

I just tell my friends, "the internet is relatively safe, but assume whatever you post will be leaked and used against you by everyone you know." It's neither factually correct nor factually wrong, the Schrödinger of Internetz, if you will. Education will stop these issues faster than secure systems.
Let me ask you something. Do you own any property whatsoever (a game system, a computer, a car, a house, etc)?

If so, why are you taking the risk of owning it when it can be stolen at anytime. Obviously if any of it is taken, it is your fault for not protecting it better.

Oh wait... no that's bullshit. When you use any system, you place faith in that system to protect you. The blame for this goes 150% to the hackers.
That's your problem for trusting someone other than yourself with personal information. When I use any system I expect it to fail, because that's what happens in life. Nothing is perfect and bad stuff happens all the time. Don't trust anyone and thus you won't be surprised when it does. Too many people want to trust others and it usually ends up screwing up.
 

PdYyP1iWeJaWBnlafPe4

Lead Megaphone
Oct 7, 2014
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Artaneius said:
That's your problem for trusting someone other than yourself with personal information. When I use any system I expect it to fail, because that's what happens in life. Nothing is perfect and bad stuff happens all the time. Don't trust anyone and thus you won't be surprised when it does. Too many people want to trust others and it usually ends up screwing up.
This is my favorite take on it (btw this account is gold),

InfoSec Taylor Swift said:
You cannot leak that which does not exist. That's the ultimate answer.
But that's the same philosophy as abstinence. We need education.
src: https://twitter.com/SwiftOnSecurity/status/506290586609913857

Unfortunately, any attempt to educate is met with, "that's victim blaming" and when I hear that ... I just stop caring. I really do. I'll help other people absolutely, but if informing someone about the risks of technology is "victim blaming", then there is a severe lack of willingness to take responsibilities for their actions and that means that any recommendations to improve privacy/security will fall on deaf ears.
 

Matthew Jabour

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Jan 13, 2012
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Simskiller said:
Matthew Jabour said:
Hey op. Update the first post to correct and say it was third party applications, like Snapsave that got compromised. Not snapchat it self.

Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/the-snappening-4chan-hacker-to-leak-thousands-of-nude-snapchat-images--but-is-it-a-hoax-9788218.html

In a statement, Snapchat said it was not hacked, instead pointing the finger at third party applications such as Snapsave.

It said: ?We can confirm that Snapchat?s servers were never breached and were not the source of these leaks. Snapchatters were victimized by their use of third-party apps to send and receive Snaps, a practice that we expressly prohibit in our Terms of Use precisely because they compromise our users? security.

?We vigilantly monitor the App Store and Google Play for illegal third-party apps and have succeeded in getting many of these removed.?
This took 1 google search to get a news article and some info on the leak.
Same basic principle. People are storing their private pictures on unsafe storage means.
 

briankoontz

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May 17, 2010
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Kopikatsu said:
My girlfriend has tons and tons and TONS of pictures of herself, many partially clothed and completely nude. She says it's because she's 'extremely photogenic', but it really just means she likes taking pictures of herself.

She doesn't give them to anyone or upload them anywhere. She just has them to have them. She actually got really pissed when she thought I saw her bare breasts in a picture, enough to cancel our date for the night after. Even though I hadn't. This from a woman who begs to be bought linguine for her birthday, and walks around the house in her underwear regardless of who is currently in the house at the time.
This is such a depressing issue on multiple levels, with people not talking about what's really going on.

Women want control over the way their bodies are presented to the world. They want to glamourize and control the way other people view their bodies. The tremendous importance of this to many of them is very disturbing, since it reduces themselves to an object, and a sexual object.

The phrase "sexual objectification is perfectly fine if the woman is doing it to herself" is a libertarian pipe dream, whose logic applies to everything, including suicide because "it doesn't hurt other people".

Powerful institutions, including the entire glamour industry, also sexually objectify women's bodies, as well as many consumers of the products of the glamour industry. Note that these consumers are majority men but include many women, who sometimes are looking for tips on how to better sexually objectify their own bodies.

Everything is feeding off everything else. We need something to break the entire rotten system. Men aren't doing it, women aren't doing it, the glamour industry seeks to prevent it - my hope is that the glorious Fappening and yet to be determined Snappening is the solution we need to stop sexual objectification, or at least move us in the right direction.

Women are currently bound by a world that sexually objectifies them, teaching them that to succeed in this world they need to control their sexual objectification.

We need to break that world and create a new one, one without sexual objectification.

As Princess Leia might say - "Help us Trolls, you're our only hope".
 

PdYyP1iWeJaWBnlafPe4

Lead Megaphone
Oct 7, 2014
18
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First Lastname said:
Not saying that it's anyone other than the fault of the Hackers for leaking the photos, but is it really that wrong to say you probably shouldn't leave something as personal and potentially embarrassing as nude photos as something as unsecure as the cloud? I mean, it's nothing but common security options most people should take out of common sense. It's the same reason you should have a password that can't be guessed easily or leave your personal information in a position where it can be potentially stolen easily. It's all a matter of taking simple steps in being proactive, there's just to many assholes out there wanting to take advantage of everyone to not afford the time or effort to do so be it information security, driving, or something as basic as personal safety.
That's the thing. Anytime you say, "please don't post/upload things on the internet if you don't want it public" is met with, "that's victim blaming!" ... no, that's the reality of technology. I'm sorry whoever says, "that's victim blaming" does not understand just how fucking complicated "silicon -> cloud -> silicon" really is. Until people understand the risks of wtf the internet is, we're going to hear a lot of bullshit from people that have no idea what they're talking about ... and they'll truly believe they are correct :-/
 

Elvis Starburst

Unprofessional Rant Artist
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Aug 9, 2011
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PdYyP1iWeJaWBnlafPe4 said:
Again, wrong. You assume there is only 1 action possible as a response, and that is hilariously misguided.

* Why can multiple account access to financials be done over the internet for that company without more provisions?
* And if it is a bank, as a consumer, I shouldn't care too much since they're most likely FDIC insured and will offer identity theft monitoring services for free.

Does that mean that the bank is guilt free in what happened? Nope. They have security holes they need to fix. But luckily, that sensitive info is insured and protect by government regulations. Will those evil NK hackers be extradited before Glorious Leader kills them? Maybe, maybe not (most likely not). That's what you're trusting your tax dollars to fund: to protect against government and corporate sponsored attacks that threaten the (digital) infrastructure of our country. Can you show me your insurance for dick pics?

I just honestly cannot envision *any* scenario where private nudes are leaked and those that took the pictures (that never existed before their actions) to have 0% or less than 0% fault for those pictures (which never existed before their actions) being compromised by means of the most complex system of devices that has ever existed in the sum total of all of humanity for all time.

(hint: Polaroid + safe, or share public keys with your spouse)

I've been watching your little back and forth here. I'm gonna give you a very real and somewhat common excuse given for a very serious crime [*Slight TRIGGER warning*]

Let's say some woman is walking down the street, perfectly legal and expected that she should be ok in doing so. She has every right to walk down that street. Nobody has any right to tell her otherwise. Let's put your logic into action... Say a man comes up behind her and swiftly steals her away and puts her in an alley. That man performs a crime. Suddenly that woman has been sexually assaulted, with her rights removed. Her expectation of safety was compromised.

Sure, like the internet and iCloud photos, there's always the chance of them being leaked or stolen, just like how every woman is at risk of being assaulted on the street. With your logic, you're telling us we should blame the victim for walking down the street in the first place, rather than deal with the man who committed the crime in the first place.

And don't bullshit me and say they're not the same and are of different severity. Both are crimes, both are illegal, both are equal to THE SAME form of judgement. I'm not denying there are differences in expectations, securities, and responsibilities between both scenarios. I'm just putting your logic into a different situation/light. Am I wrong with what I've said?
 

PdYyP1iWeJaWBnlafPe4

Lead Megaphone
Oct 7, 2014
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Elvis Starburst said:
PdYyP1iWeJaWBnlafPe4 said:
*self-snip*

I've been watching your little back and forth here. I'm gonna give you a very real and somewhat common excuse given for a very serious crime [*Slight TRIGGER warning*]

Let's say some woman is walking down the street, perfectly legal and expected that she should be ok in doing so. She has every right to walk down that street. Nobody has any right to tell her otherwise. Let's put your logic into action... Say a man comes up behind her and swiftly steals her away and puts her in an alley. That man performs a crime. Suddenly that woman has been sexually assaulted, with her rights removed. Her expectation of safety was compromised.

Sure, like the internet and iCloud photos, there's always the chance of them being leaked or stolen, just like how every woman is at risk of being assaulted on the street. With your logic, you're telling us we should blame the victim for walking down the street in the first place, rather than deal with the man who committed the crime in the first place.

And don't bullshit me and say they're not the same and are of different severity. Both are crimes, both are illegal, both are equal to THE SAME form of judgement. I'm not denying there are differences in expectations, securities, and responsibilities between both scenarios. I'm just putting your logic into a different situation/light. Am I wrong with what I've said?
I kinda think you are a bit wrong in what you said, tbh.

You cannot duplicate a human. You can easily duplicate data. Data is information, the representation on a medium differs, but it can be easily be replicated without loss of original. With humans (the physical world), it is impossible to have a perfect clone+conciousness. No human is in multiple places at once in perfect condition (unlike data). That makes movement/duplication/alteration of the subject terribly difficult *in comparison*.

How are they equal to the "same form of judgement" if there are different expectations, securities, and responsibilities? If the context, expected outcome, and individual responsibility is different (as you admitted), then there is no way they are purely equivalent (by virtue of a single variable differing). I explicitly stated it was a non-majority but non-0% of blame. You simple cannot under any circumstance copy or leak that which does not exist. It does not mean that the attacker is correct in any means, but the attacker did not generate nor upload sensitive data to a globally restricted area (globally accessible with the correct passphrase/credentials). If the data is not uploaded to the internet (that is, only kept locally or on an encrypted USB kept at home), no attacker *on the internet* will be able to subvert & access those images.

I mean, seriously, why would anyone put a lock on their house if stealing is illegal? If it's illegal, under no circumstances (according to your logic) should you safeguard against it since after all, it is illegal to steal your possessions. But if it is illegal to B&E + steal, why do people do it? Maybe, just maybe, there are a fuckton of shitbags in the world that have absolutely zero fucks to give with respect to anyone but themselves. Just because one *wants* the world to be all gravy and sunshine doesn't make it so. After all, rape is illegal but women carry mace. Why carry mace if assault and rape is illegal? They shouldn't need to do that. If they carry mace, aren't they saying that it's already futile to trust people at large? Why is carrying mace acceptable but not encrypting your excessively private/intimate data/information?

People can argue this shit as long as they would like, it will never ever remove shitbags from the world. Accounting for shitbags IRL does a lot of good on an individual and societal level, even if it *shouldn't* be needed because of laws (because we all know no one ever, in all time, has ever broken a law).

The people that ***** and moan about privacy and security wrt nudes can almost never (in my personal experience) describe to me how a packet exits my network controller, hits the main server, and comes back. Does that mean that they are incapable of using the tech? Not at all. Does it mean that they have a misguided understanding of what is happening under the hood of their personal-choice-app? Absolutely. There is a line between saying, "this is important information to keep you safe from individuals and governments" and "you are never at fault for anything you do" but that line is pretty god damn wide and to erase that line just because of legality completely ignores human nature and shitbags in general.
 

BoredRolePlayer

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Nov 9, 2010
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LarsInCharge said:
Matthew Jabour said:
Why? What compels a person to take a picture of themselves naked? Surely, if you wish for someone else to view your naked body, you could show them the real thing?

Now, that's perfectly okay, there's no law against being weird, but why store them in unsafe places? Don't get me wrong, it's a sex crime to leak these things, but I would think, after taking a nude photo, you might put a little effort into concealing it? Because everyone should know by now, the digital world is not very secure.

When it was just the iCloud, that was reasonable. You have to store your photos somewhere, and it's not unreasonable to assume they would be safe with Apple. But now Snapchat? Come on, who could ever think that would be a safe place to store lewd photos?

Now, I won't lie: I have some photos on my phone that I would not like to see the light of day. But I put effort into making sure they don't see daylight. People are entitled to privacy, but in this day and age, you have to put some work towards that goal. Use some common sense, just like with those folders on your desktop marked 'stuff'. And unless you absolutely need to - say, for example, to draw in a yardstick for comparison - don't use Snapchat.
My friends (who were dating at the time) swapped nude pics for when they weren't able to see each other for long periods of time. So I understand why people do it.

The thing is, they have every right to do it and expect those images to be protected (especially since this is another case of them deleting the images and the site storing them anyway).
Just wanna put out there, buy it's very nature data isn't "truly" deleted. Doing so is very time consuming and can kill the medium faster.
 

Vivi22

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Aug 22, 2010
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Matthew Jabour said:
Of course, they have every right to do it. But it's well known that most data is never really deleted, especially with cloud storage.
No. It's well known amongst people who are reasonably tech savvy. The average Joe that doesn't care to know about most of this stuff does not know. And frankly, they shouldn't have to since if they deleted something, it should be gone.
 

Revnak_v1legacy

Fixed by "Monday"
Mar 28, 2010
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SonOfAnarchy91 said:
Its not about sending nudes to people. These pictures were hacked from Cloud Services my qustion is why would save nude pictures of YOURSELF? Once you've sent the pic why on earth would you keep it? Are these people so narcissistic that they get off on looking at themselves naked?
Pictures they deleted and also I am pretty certain that I-cloud may have uploaded them itself or they may have used that system to send them in the first place.

Some of them ar being big babies about, Jennifer Lawrence especially. Saying that anyone who views the pictures are committing a "sex crime". Is she really so stupid? Why can't they all just laugh it off like Kaley Cuoco from Big Bang Theory? When she got asked about she just laughed and said "oh well whoever got them went through a lot of trouble to see me naked" and just shrugged the whole thing off not bitching and moaning like Jennifer Lawrence and even stupider Kelly Brook who gets her clothes off for a living!
1. That's because it is a sex crime. Non-consensual pornagraphing is illegal. Viewing it is iffy at best.
2. Why should she have to have the same attitudes towards sex as anyone else? Seems pretty arbitrary to me.
3. I know I would be bitching and moaning. I guess I'm just an attention whore.

I'm starting to think the whole thing is a HUGE Publicity Stunt. Because most people wouldn't even know about Jennifer Lawrences' pictures if she didn't say anything and made that big speech about how people looking at them are committing a "sex crime". Jen you're a celebrity if you can't handle alll the papparazi, news tabloids and the occasional photo leak then you should retire from acting all together, its obviously not for you. I think she's more mad that some of the pictures show what she really is a stoner idiot who's slightley bisexual and a bit of a nympho. If she kept her mouth shut the whole thing would have been forgotten about she only has herself to blame for making even more people aware of it.
1. FUCKING WHAT? These images were fucking everywhere the day they were leaked. EVERYWHERE. You think it was her complaining that got people to notice and not their aching boners? You have got to be fucking kidding me. You must be new here.
2. If they didn't want to die from lung cancer they shouldn't have worked in our factories! If they didn't want the black lung they should have not been miners! If they didn't want to die in the trenches or blown to smithereens by artillery they shouldn't have joined the army!
3. And of course it ends with a bunch of sexist slut shaming, with just a hint of homophobia. Stay classy Escapist.
 

freaper

snuggere mongool
Apr 3, 2010
1,196
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mad825 said:
Jux said:
These hackers are sexual predators, and should be treated as such.
Knee.Jerk.Reaction.

How about selling these photos? Don't you think they'll make quite a bit of money for it?
If they can get to your pictures they can probably get to your codes, don't you think?

OT: Yes, the hackers are to blame 100%. Then again, I lock my doors when I leave the house, because I don't live in a 500-man village where I know everyone and everyone knows me. The internet is just that analogy extrapolated to new heights.