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Jennifer Lawrence talks about being violated

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Finding a flaw in "the cloud", that makes it possible to bruteforce passwords, is actually hacking.

Exactly.

This person just won't give up trying to say it's not a "hack". How blunt-headed can you get. Time and time again plus links have been given. It's a very weird bullet point to get hung up on.
 
sarcasm?

I live my life not trusting internet. Believe me, that's not very difficult to do and I barely need to think about it. In fact I've thought about less than you just wrote up in your post. I don't think I'm missing out on much life by not trusting Apple, or Google, or Facebook with some of my info.

No it isn't sarcasm. I said "if" this was how you lived your life (and so on).

I don't use a lot of those sites either. I'm not on cloud, Facebook, etcetera. However, I still sympathize with anyone affected by this.

Forget the celebrity part. She's a human being and this became a nightmare for her. Everyone makes mistakes or choices everyone doesn't agree with. That isn't enough to somehow feel they warrant suffering. Because they don't.
 
Your posts.

This is basically a thread about mitigating guilt now:

"I don't want to feel guilty for having blamed Jennifer Lawrence for having her photos stolen"
"I don't want to feel guilty for having looked at her photos when they leaked."
"I want to figure out a way to hold the people in the photos somehow at fault for their own misfortune so that when I add to said misfortune in my own tiny way I don't have to feel as responsible for contributing to that destructive culture."

You're deciding my arguments for me and then rejecting the arguments you decided upon. If you're going to go on a meta-tirade, try quoting somebody who's actually said that stuff.
 
"I have no sympathy for her because something completely unrelated could have happened that would have been bad too. Privacy is a right, except when you are a celebrity".


This is what you are saying. Do you know how idiotic this thinking is?

Heartless maybe
 
"I have no sympathy for her because something completely unrelated could have happened that would have been bad too. Privacy is a right, except when you are a celebrity".


This is what you are saying. Do you know how idiotic this thinking is?

When you make the choice to become a celeb, you should know there's a HUGE risk to your privacy. No one is saying that you don't have a right to privacy because you're a celeb, but your privacy is at a much higher risk of being breached.

That's a fact. Why do you think politicians who run for office have to make sure they have a super clean background? Because that one thing you thought was private will come back to haunt you.
 
When you make the choice to become a celeb, you should know there's a HUGE risk to your privacy. No one is saying that you don't have a right to privacy because you're a celeb, but your privacy is at a much higher risk of being breached.

That's a fact. Why do you think politicians who run for office have to make sure they have a super clean background? Because that one thing you thought was private will come back to haunt you.

Good thing Lewinsky didn't have iPhone.
 
No. People found out about it, and the pics were searched most before Lawrence ever said a single thing.

Your read on how this broke down is just wrong, man.

So now, not only are you focusing on how having her nude photos stolen is her fault, you're advocating that she shouldn't speak up on how this theft has violated her privacy to an amazing level.

This is not a good look.
Of course the search for her pics would be at their height around the time of the leak. But here we are, weeks later, over 500 posts into this topic yet again. Many who've already seen the pics will probably take another look, and many more who haven't will check them out purely out of curiosity.

Although I think she went a bit too far, JLaw has every right to complain. But staying on it will cause more people to see the pics. My older brother wouldn't know JLaw if she slapped him the face, but he's seen the pics after one of these outbursts. Yet he probably hasn't seen the pics of some of the other celebs from the same leak that he knows better.
 
"I have no sympathy for her because something completely unrelated could have happened that would have been bad too. Privacy is a right, except when you are a celebrity".


This is what you are saying. Do you know how idiotic this thinking is?

No it's not idiotic at all, it's not completely unrelated as the ultimate effect is exactly the same. Privacy doesn't stop being a right when you're a celebrity, the tiny difference is that when you're a celebrity there will actually be a concrete hunger about this kind of photos. And you know it.

It doesn't matter if it comes through hacking, sharing, or whatever. It makes absolutely no difference.
I'm not saying that the hackers "did right". I just don't feel any sympathy about her giving her nude pics around and complaining once they get out, what can I do. It's ultimately depending how much you care about yourself, if you think that it's OKAY that your body could be in a photo\a video or something that should be seen only in private moments.
If you think that it's okay, then you're taking a gamble.

Besides, it's not as if this never happened before, guess what, it did.
 
Of course the search for her pics would be at their height around the time of the leak. But here we are, weeks later, over 500 posts into this topic yet again. Many who've already seen the pics will probably take another look, and many more who haven't will check them out purely out of curiosity.

Although I think she went a bit too far, JLaw has every right to complain. But staying on it will cause more people to see the pics. My older brother wouldn't know JLaw if she slapped him the face, but he's seen the pics after one of these outbursts. Yet he probably hasn't seen the pics of some of the other celebs from the same leak that he knows better.

What other "outburst?"
 
When you make the choice to become a celeb, you should know there's a HUGE risk to your privacy. No one is saying that you don't have a right to privacy because you're a celeb, but your privacy is at a much higher risk of being breached.

That's a fact. Why do you think politicians who run for office have to make sure they have a super clean background? Because that one thing you thought was private will come back to haunt you.
Ok. So what. Who cares. That isn't her fault. She did nothing wrong. She has her rights and they were violated. What is the fucking point of a right if you can't use it?
 
Yes. It is. Well it's actually about internet savviness. It's about taking care of your own personal data.



And that's simply not the same.

In one case someone robs her personally of her own possession. Breaks into her own home. In the other case she voluntarily gives away her private data to a mega corporation and crosses her fingers that nothing will happen (hacker, non-trustworthy employees, bug in the code that is running on the server, backup tapes going into a dumpster, fuckup in security etc.), while having it accessible all over the world by simply entering a userid + password. She voluntarily sent her raw data to Apple, so that they could take care of it. Apple fucked up. End of story.

Giving the data to the boyfriend and hoping that he won't leak it in any case (breakup, etc.) - well that's a bit risky already, but at least it makes sense. She loves him. Fine.

But giving the data to a mega corporation? That's on another level. That's like giving the data to a few thousand people and hoping that every single one is 100% trustworthy (including government meth heads) without even knowing any single one of those people at all.

And that's why all these analogies fail.
The Internet is a whole other beast that you can't just treat as real life.
 
Man, that's a high risk in my opinion, that's a lot of trust in cloud storage. I have to say that I would never put a nude photo of my SO on cloud storage. I just don't trust it. Call me paranoid, but it's just out there and I couldn't live with that.

AFAIK there is only a handful of known instances of these so-called "insiders" snooping on private data. You have to understand, the hiring bar at these companies is extremely high. For someone to throw away an extremely successful career which they've worked their whole life to build up is exceedingly rare. But it happens, as you can see by doing some googling (try "David Barksdale", for example). And each time it has happened, controls are tightened. data becomes restricted to even fewer people than it was before. additional controls are put in place so that if one of these people wants to see something, they simply don't have access unless it goes through multiple approvals. Not in the sense of "well they still have the power to access it, they'll just get in even more trouble than before", but rather in the sense of "it literally is impossible to get the data without multiple signoffs".

Now consider the amount of data these companies process. How much data do you think Google has processed in the past, say, 5 years? I have no idea, but I'll just take a wild guess and say 5 exabytes. The amount of data that I personally have stored in the cloud which would do significant damage to me were it seen by someone is maybe on the order of a gigabyte. So doing some quick math, that accounts for about 2.0 × 10^(-10) of google's data, or .00000002% of Google's data.

Multiply this number by the probability that they were unlucky enough to hire an engineer with sufficient motive to throw away his entire career, and then multiply it again by the probability that he was able to get past privacy controls in place to prevent this sort of thing.

Yea, the probability is zero.
 
No one is saying that you don't have a right to privacy because you're a celeb,

It's really weird when people post "No one is saying X" when the entire first few pages of this thread, as well as the last few threads about the hack, prove that wrong incredibly quickly.
 
Ok. So what. Who cares. That isn't her fault. She did nothing wrong. She has her rights and they were violated. What is the fucking point of a right if you can't use it?

The internet has changed the game. Your rights are always on the edge of being violated. It's not just about Lars being mad about his Metallica music being stolen anymore.
 
No it's not idiotic at all, it's not completely unrelated as the ultimate effect is exactly the same. Privacy doesn't stop being a right when you're a celebrity, the tiny difference is that when you're a celebrity there will actually be a concrete hunger about this kind of photos. And you know it.

It doesn't matter if it comes through hacking, sharing, or whatever. It makes absolutely no difference.
I'm not saying that the hackers "did right". I just don't feel any sympathy about her giving her nude pics around and complaining once they get out, what can I do. It's ultimately depending how much you care about yourself, if you think that it's OKAY that your body could be in a photoa video or something that should be seen only in private moments.
If you think that it's okay, then you're taking a gamble.

Besides, it's not as if this never happened before, guess what, it did.
It's completely unrelated because her boyfriend didn't leak it. What is the point of a right if you cannot use it? It is completely contrarian to tell somebody they have the right to do something and them tell them not to do it. I hope people in person realize how gross you are. I wouldn't want to know anybody with the mentality you have as a secret.
 
The internet has changed the game. Your rights are always on the edge of being violated. It's not just about Lars being mad about his Metallica music being stolen anymore.
Just checked. Nope, Internet has had no impact on what our rights are. Can you show me a source that says our rights are different in this post-Internet world?
 
No it isn't sarcasm. I said "if" this was how you lived your life (and so on).

I don't use a lot of those sites either. I'm not on cloud, Facebook, etcetera. However, I still sympathize with anyone affected by this.

Forget the celebrity part. She's a human being and this became a nightmare for her. Everyone makes mistakes or choices everyone doesn't agree with. That isn't enough to somehow feel they warrant suffering. Because they don't.

I mean sure. It sucks for her. Not sure how not celebrity people could really relate to this though. When average person's private pictures are stolen from nobody would do anything about it. I don't expect police to investigate how my Facebook account was hacked. In fact I think it would be a waste of their time. I would be happy if they got to investigating credit card fraud which they are still too lazy to do.
 
No it's not idiotic at all, it's not completely unrelated as the ultimate effect is exactly the same. Privacy doesn't stop being a right when you're a celebrity, the tiny difference is that when you're a celebrity there will actually be a concrete hunger about this kind of photos. And you know it.

It doesn't matter if it comes through hacking, sharing, or whatever. It makes absolutely no difference.
I'm not saying that the hackers "did right". I just don't feel any sympathy about her giving her nude pics around and complaining once they get out, what can I do. It's ultimately depending how much you care about yourself, if you think that it's OKAY that your body could be in a photoa video or something that should be seen only in private moments.
If you think that it's okay, then you're taking a gamble.

Besides, it's not as if this never happened before, guess what, it did.

This is just sad.
 
When you make the choice to become a celeb, you should know there's a HUGE risk to your privacy. No one is saying that you don't have a right to privacy because you're a celeb, but your privacy is at a much higher risk of being breached.

That's a fact. Why do you think politicians who run for office have to make sure they have a super clean background? Because that one thing you thought was private will come back to haunt you.

Except most celebrities hate paparazzi, some have even gotten violent or resorted to constant hat-wearing and other tactics just to avoid them. We're a celebrity-loving culture, and we love these celebrity scoops and perpetuate what makes this kind of stuff "news". If Jennifer Lawrence was any other girl, it wouldn't matter as much (sadly), but she's no different at heart for just being another person involved in a shady and shitty situation --- NO ONE should have their photos hacked and leaked; celebrity or not. No one deserves to have their private photos leaked. You make it sound like she should just "toughen up" to it because she's a celebrity. Why shouldn't she feel just as bad if it were anyone else? It's an embarrassing thing to deal with.

Celebrities and politicians are followed but not for the same reasons; one is to find dirt on a nation or some sort of leader (someone you want to have faith in, vote for, and hope they aren't a scumbag), the former is just because they're popular for the entertainment they're in and literally have little to no direct affect on us beyond what we watch on a Saturday night.
 
Of course the search for her pics would be at their height around the time of the leak. But here we are, weeks later, over 500 posts into this topic yet again. Many who've already seen the pics will probably take another look, and many more who haven't will check them out purely out of curiosity.

This is a leap I don't find supported by any kind of reality. The thread seems to be made up of roughly two kinds of people - those who are unhappy with the culture of victim blaming, and those who are trying to nuance their way into an end-run around being called victim blamers.

Neither of those two parties are likely to go seek out pictures they were either never going to download due to their stance or their unrelated disinterest, or have already downloaded and saved. Your assumption that this 500 post thread about her Vanity Fair article will lead to more people looking at pictures that were already front-page news long before she even offered her first COMMENT on the theft is a bad assumption. It doesn't carry any weight.

Although I think she went a bit too far,

A bit too far with WHAT? I don't even understand this, man. You're telling a woman who had her private photos shared on the internet with hundreds of thousands of people she didn't ever intend to see them, that she's going a bit too far in writing an essay about it.

That's a bad look for you.
 
This is just sad.

heh, as you wish. What can I do, me and my family probably have a different view on treasuring what's private, and your naked body is certainly part of it.
Guess it's not the same for everyone. We're not talking about a tricked 14 years old girl here.
 
It's time to bring back faceless007's brilliant post from earlier so some of you can hopefully understand how weird it is to see you talking about this like you know better about protecting yourself on the Internet:

This brilliant post just shows that plenty of people don't give a shit about their personal data or don't think about what they are doing.

btw. I don't use gmail, facebook and all sorts of other crap. Not only because I don't want to, but I also don't want that data on the internet - at all - and I also don't want those corporations to have it. I even block google cookies and so on. I'm privacy-aware.

My BluRay/DVD collection for example is in the internet. Because I don't have a problem with that. It was a concious decision. I wouldn't even have a problem with it in case my real name was attached to it.

The creditcard part is silly. Creditcard numbers is not critical information. When I order something from for example zavvi and they get hacked, then I will simply contact my bank and get a new creditcard number. Already happened once. Yes, it's a hassle, but it's not critical. Like nude photos, medical data and other really personal data.

It would have a point in case people posted their bank account number + PIN + transaction numbers on the internet. But noone does that. Strangely. I mean in case someone did, calling that someone naive would be "victim blaming" according to posts in this thread.

It's funny they use the word "could" in the title, don't you think?

Noone knows for sure, because Apple didn't give out detailed information. This would have been one way in. Maybe there were more than that. This way was definitely available.
 
Just checked. Nope, Internet has had no impact on what our rights are. Can you show me a source that says our rights are different in this post-Internet world?

Your rights are the same they are just being violated more often. Piracy, Identity Theft, Stolen naked pictures.
 
This brilliant post just shows that plenty of people don't give a shit about their personal data or don't think about what they are doing.

btw. I don't use gmail, facebook and all sorts of other crap. Not only because I don't want to, but I also don't want that data on the internet - at all - and I also don't want those corporations to have it. I even block google cookies and so on. I'm privacy-aware.

I would call this either "privacy paranoid" or "privacy unaware", not privacy aware. Some of the best and smartest security researchers and privacy advocates in the world use all of these services, and they don't feel their privacy is at risk. Certainly removing all of them from your usage habits sets your risk to 0, but it's the "i don't know enough about what I'm doing to keep my data private, therefore I won't use it at all". That's the definition of "unaware"
 
heh, as you wish. What can I do, me and my family probably have a different view on treasuring what's private, and your naked body is certainly part of it.
Guess it's not the same for everyone. We're not talking about a tricked 14 years old girl here.
Yeah guys, come on! She's a 24 year old girl who locked her photos away on a cloud service of the largest tech company in the world. Having it somewhere that skilled hackers would have to find vulnerabilities in Apple or her own security endlessly until they got lucky is basically the same as her accidentally forwarding it to everybody in her contacts as far as security goes! How is she even a victim?!



It's sad how people can think like this.
 
Your rights are the same they are just being violated more often. Piracy, Identity Theft, Stolen naked pictures.
Typically, when a subsection of a population is having their rights targeted to be violated, you don't blame them for trying to exercise their rights.

You don't tell black people who were lynched that they shouldn't have driven through a racist town.

You don't tell women who were raped that they shouldn't have gone outside alone.

You don't tell gay people assaulted that they shouldn't have let it be known that they are gay.

So why do we suddenly blame famous people again?
 
Typically, when a subsection of a population is having their rights targeted to be violated, you don't blame them for trying to exercise their rights.

You don't tell black people who were lynched that they shouldn't have driven through a racist town.

You don't tell women who were raped that they shouldn't have gone outside alone.

You don't tell gay people assaulted that they shouldn't have let it be known that they are gay.

So why do we suddenly blame famous people again?

What are you doing for your right to take dick pics?
 
I think everyone has the right to take dick pics and share. But who protects these rights? The government?

You trust em? I think for many things we are own our own.

Your rights to privacy aren't based on what you do.

Do you not understand that?
 
I understand it's unwise to put nakid pictures online. And now we are back to square one.

You all keep up the good fight.

Peace.
So no, you don't understand.


And yes, we return to square one when you nonsensically turn the conversation back to square one. I guess you just needed an excuse to back out.
 
So is being naive in a world full of dangers. You take whatever reasonable precautions you can make.

Or not. It's your choice really. No one can force you to do anything.

Victim Blaming logic only holds up as long as the scenario is pedestrian in nature. As soon as you go to something more serious, then generally that thought process blows up under the weight.

Like say ... it is cool outside and I leave my window open to let the breeze in. If someone suddenly jumps through the window and murders my family, is it still my fault because I opened the window?

Woah, suddenly the scenario got a whole lot more serious then just someones nude photos. Now victim blaming isn't all that great anymore.
 
Why do people actually think uploading something to the icloud is secure? Why? Because Apple says it is? Because you have a login/password to gain access?

It's not secure.

Just like Facebook...and gmail, and anything else you use via the internet, it's not secure.

I wouldn't send private photos via my gmail to anyone if I didn't want everyone to see it.

I most certainly wouldn't store personal photos on some cloud device just because it's called secure.

Secure is your own personal home computer...store them there. or on an HDD, or somewhere that's NOT stored online.
Great post. Co-sign.
 
It's completely unrelated because her boyfriend didn't leak it.
Then you're reading without understanding the whole point of my post, sorry.

What is the point of a right if you cannot use it?
This doesn't mean anything. I've never said she shouldn't complain about her privacy being violated. Especially since it was through an hacking.

I merely stated that she took a big gamble when she took naked pictures of herself. If we want to be a little less strict, she could've taken them and leave them on a physical object. A hard disk in her house. A photo on a camera and she owns the SD.
Sure, someone could break in her house and stole them but at least that's incredibly way less likely to happen.


It is completely contrarian to tell somebody they have the right to do something and them tell them not to do it.
Fascinating theory.
Completely abstract from reality, but that's another story.

Having rights doesn't mean you don't have to make choices. You wouldn't post your facebook password here just because you have a right for privacy, right?
And you would be quite mad if I had sex with your wife even if it's not against my rights to do so, right? You know, I have the right to do it, so it's contrarian if you tell me not to!

It's not like since she has a "right to privacy" she could send those pictures to random people and then ask for my sympathy when she complains later if they get leaked.
I know that it's not what happened, don't take it away from the whole point again. The point is that rights aren't abstract from the context of reality. You make choices based on how much you treasure things.


tl;dr
You don't have "the right to make nude pics". You have the a right to privacy, but that privacy, in technology, is guaranteed through certain systems which you should be aware of.
You know there's a password system and that if someone finds it you're in trouble. It doesn't matter if it's by brute force, or you told it to your lover, or someone finds it casually.
In her case, she even knew that it had already happened.

I hope people in person realize how gross you are. I wouldn't want to know anybody with the mentality you have as a secret.
Same here, I certainly wouldn't want to know anybody who considers people "gross" because they disagree onhow much you should treasure your privacy
 
No I don't. Because I expect more from society. When people take self shots of themselves, and share them with certain individuals. The "risk" is on how much you trust the people you share them with. These weren't leaked by the receiver. They were hacked.

They were PRIVATE pictures, uploaded to a cloud service.

I'm beginning to thing most of these people don't understand what actually happened.

You guys want to put blame on someone, put blame on the hackers first, then put blame on the security measures, then put blame on yourself for thinking you have a right to see private pictures of people.

Agree with this post, particularly the last part. Bolded is the only part I have an issue with. Surely you aren't that blindly trusting and naive? Society runs the gamut from people with a good moral compasses to scumbags with a chip on their shoulder who think they have a right to steal. It's not "blaming the victim" or "monday morning QBing" to point out that people should keep sensitive information out of the cloud and protect themselves from said scumbags. We point that out because we want to learn from this so there aren't future victims. What's wrong with that?

Also LOL at the poster with the Google avatar saying we should expect the best from humanity, :-)
 
I would call this either "privacy paranoid" or "privacy unaware", not privacy aware.

I already wrote that I simply don't want to use it. I don't WANT my data to be on facebook or any of the other crappy services. Not even non-critical data. Because I don't WANT any of those corporations to get any of my data, especially the ones located in 'murica. That's my decision.

Never forget this little fact about google, facebook and others: If you are not paying for it, then you are the product.

btw. google for example already has creepy tech like this one:
http://www.robertelliottsmith.com/?p=530

Some of the best and smartest security researchers and privacy advocates in the world use all of these services, and they don't feel their privacy is at risk.

Ok.

Certainly removing all of them from your usage habits sets your risk to 0, but it's the "i don't know enough about what I'm doing to keep my data private, therefore I won't use it at all". That's the definition of "unaware"

Or simply not giving a shit about those "services". I simply don't need or want them.

IF I wanted to use them, I would take care about what data I publish. That's what I'm doing with services, that I do use (for example GAF).
 
ya more like..has an iota of common sense

If "having an iota of common sense" means not using any cloud-based service for any personal data, then the vast majority of technology users in the developed world don't qualify, so clearly isn't that common and your threshold for what counts as "common sense" is rather meaningless.
 
Then you're reading without understanding the whole point of my post, sorry.


This doesn't mean anything. I've never said she shouldn't complain about her privacy being violated. Especially since it was through an hacking.

I merely stated that she took a big gamble when she took naked pictures of herself. If we want to be a little less strict, she could've taken them and leave them on a physical object. A hard disk in her house. A photo on a camera and she owns the SD.
Sure, someone could break in her house and stole them but at least that's incredibly way less likely to happen.



Fascinating theory.
Completely abstract from reality, but that's another story.

Having rights doesn't mean you don't have to make choices. You wouldn't post your facebook password here just because you have a right for privacy, right?
And you would be quite mad if I had sex with your wife even if it's not against my rights to do so, right? You know, I have the right to do it, so it's contrarian if you tell me not to!

It's not like since she has a "right to privacy" she could send those pictures to random people and then ask for my sympathy when she complains later if they get leaked.
I know that it's not what happened, don't take it away from the whole point again. The point is that rights aren't abstract from the context of reality. You make choices based on how much you treasure things.


tl;dr
You don't have "the right to make nude pics". You have the a right to privacy, but that privacy, in technology, is guaranteed through certain systems which you should be aware of.
You know there's a password system and that if someone finds it you're in trouble. It doesn't matter if it's by brute force, or you told it to your lover, or someone finds it casually.
In her case, she even knew that it had already happened.


Same here, I certainly wouldn't want to know anybody who considers people "gross" because they disagree onhow much you should treasure your privacy
There is so much garbage here. What a mess. Stop dancing around this bullshit.

Either she has the right to privacy or she doesn't.

If she does, others breaking it are in the wrong and she has done nothing wrong

She does have the right.

Therefore, the people breaking her right to privacy are wrong and she has done nothing wrong.


It's as simple as that. You only have to make bullshit weasel logic to try and excuse gross behavior. It's not hard to simply say she is a victim and what happened shouldn't have happened. Full stop.
 
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