I agree with her comment that looking at her stolen nude photos is "perpetuating a sexual offense." And I'm frankly surprised and disappointed at the number of people criticizing her, saying this is a simple "stolen property" issue. Obviously, her photos are stolen property, but if someone stole a valuable piece of jewelry from her and posted a pic online, there wouldn't be floods of people ogling it. That they're doing so with her pics speaks to the motives associated with sex crimes. |
I agree. |
Don't put anything into cyberspace that you wouldn't be comfortable with the world seeing. |
I don't agree. If you place nude photos of yourself online, even uploaded to a cloud, your expectation of privacy is 0. She seems stupid to me to think she has privacy online and, Im a woman. |
. +1 what idiots. We all know nothing is safe. |
Equating looking at stolen photos of naked celeb selfies to a sexual offense is absurd. Rape is a sexual offense. Child porn is a sexual offense. The person who stole the photos committed a criminal act, but it was not a sexual offense.
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+2 |
She should use this to teach kids about the dangers of sexting. |
+3. She is just acting like an idiot. Shut up already! |
Maybe she will hit the gym |
I don't think it's akin to rape, but it's a horrible violation. I don't think victim blaming is very appropriate (though it's always the preferred sport on DCUM). And she didn't put it on the Internet. The hacker(s) did. |
Yes, we should all have bodies as ugly as Jennifer Lawrence's. ![]() |
This is just like when some idiot actress said being photographed by the paparazzi was like being raped. |
We understand that sexual offense is a much broader term than rape. Right? |
Yes, pp. But if you look at a celeb selfie online, you are not committing a sexual offense. Moron. |