Related News: City worker jailed for fake porn posts of colleague

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. BBC News published an article titled City worker jailed for fake porn posts of colleague:

A City worker who posted fake photos of his colleague on porn websites after she refused to give him her number has been jailed.

Davide Buccheri, 25, made a gallery between 2016 and 2017 while working at the investment management firm M&G.

Buccheri then told the woman’s bosses about the photos to discredit her.

Source: BBC News

Related News: Greenville bus driver arrested over texts to 15-year-old

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. WSFA published an article titled Greenville bus driver arrested over texts to 15-year-old.

A Greenville bus driver has been arrested after police say he had “inappropriate text conversations” with a 15-year-old boy who rode on his bus.

Investigators have identified the driver as 29-year-old Leo Bowen. He was taken into custody on Oct. 3.

Source: WSFA

Related News: Penn State fraternity suspended over alleged nude Facebook pictures

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. CNN published an article titled Penn State fraternity suspended over alleged nude Facebook pictures.

A Pennsylvania State University fraternity has been suspended after allegedly posting on a private Facebook page compromising photos of women, including some who appeared to be asleep or passed out.

The suspension of Kappa Delta Rho (KDR) fraternity comes as State College Police as well as university officials investigate the fraternity’s alleged use of the online page with up to 144 active members, including current and former students.

“No arrests are being made at this time,” State College Police Lt. Keith Robb said. “Unfortunately, we aren’t able to identify any suspects right now because the accounts on Facebook were sanitized, wiped clean.”

Source: CNN

Related News: Nude ‘Snapchat images’ put online by hackers

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. BBC News published an article titled Nude ‘Snapchat images’ put online by hackers.

Explicit images believed to have been sent through messaging service Snapchat were reportedly put online, with threats from hackers to upload more.

Users who had been accessing the service via a third-party app, and not the official Snapchat app, had their images intercepted.

As half of its users are aged between 13 and 17, there is concern that many of the images may be of children.

Source: BBC News

Related News: Celebs whose nude photos were stolen threaten Google with $100M lawsuit

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Ars Technica published an article titled Celebs whose nude photos were stolen threaten Google with $100M lawsuit.

Celebrities who had their nude photos stolen last month are now threatening Google with a $100 million lawsuit unless the search giant does a better job of removing copies of the photos found on its various services, including YouTube and Blogger.

Source: Ars Technica

Related News: Third batch of naked celeb photos leaked

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. BBC News published an article titled Third batch of naked celeb photos leaked.

They were photographs taken in private, but that hasn’t stopped a third batch of naked images of celebrities being leaked online.

Source: BBC News

Related News: When tweeting from the beat goes bad

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. AL.com published an article titled When tweeting from the beat goes bad.

In April, when the New York Police Department asked its Twitter followers to post pictures of themselves with New York police officers, it seemed like a cool idea.

Except social media users responded by posting the most controversial pictures of New York police officers that they could find.

Source: AL.com

Related News: Naked celeb hack lesson: ‘Delete’ doesn’t mean delete

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. CNN published an article titled Naked celeb hack lesson: ‘Delete’ doesn’t mean delete.

The naked photo you took on your phone — and deleted — is still around, somewhere.

That’s the reality today because of how modern phones, tablets and laptops save your data. By default, photos and documents don’t reside on your device alone.

They’re routinely “backed up to the cloud.” That means they’re quietly copied onto a company’s computer servers. Your embarrassing selfie lives on half a dozen machines in North America and Europe.

Source: CNN

Related News: Poachers Can Use Your Geotagged Safari Photos To Hunt Down Rhinos

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Gizmodo published an article titled Poachers Can Use Your Geotagged Safari Photos To Hunt Down Rhinos.

Oof, here’s one unexpected negative effect of ubiquitous smartphones—a sign asking people to turn off geotagging when they take pictures of endangered rhinos so that poachers can’t figure out where they are.

The photo started making its way across the internet after it was posted by Eleni de Wet, who owns a branding and marketing company in Johannesburg, South Africa. Sure, that means there might be some kind of marketing spin on the photo, but it’s also indicative of a larger problem: poachers are using technology to help them find and kill endangered species. So that Instagram photo you snapped on a tourist safari? It might be helping poachers actually hunt those animals.

Source: Gizmodo