Naked Snapchat Screenshots

Naked Snapchat Screenshots




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Naked Snapchat Screenshots
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Users are panicking over fake messages that claim the app will publicly share your most intimate pics
SNAPCHAT is being flooded with scam messages threatening to share users' nude photos and wipe all the pics from the app.
The company is warning of a specific fake message that tells users their saved pictures, known as " Memories ", will be deleted unless they share the notification – but at least two additional hoaxes have also been spotted.
The others include one that claims all "nude/pornographic photos" will be shared publicly on Snapchat 's official Twitter account, and another that falsely states you'll soon have pay a $3.99 fee to use the app.
All three fakes seem to have surfaced on Tuesday and are being attributed to the Team Snapchat account (which the company uses to share announcements about updates and special events).
"We're aware of a Screenshot going around with a rumor about your Memories" – don't worry! This is #fake news," the company tweeted.
But concerned users are also asking Snapchat to confirm the other messages are fakes too.
We're aware of a screenshot going around with a rumor about your Memories - don't worry! This is #fakenews 🙅
What about this one I tried looking through the comments to see anything about it && couldn’t find anything & im lowkey rlly worried... so is it true? pic.twitter.com/GY7kf1MBDq
Snapchat told The Sun that it doesn't have anything else to share beyond its tweet.
"What about this one," said one Twitter user, sharing a pic of the hoax message about a premium Snapchat fee. "I'm lowkey rlly worried...is is it true?"
Snapchat then verified that the message is indeed false in its reply.
"There's one about nudes going around too," tweeted @chocalatebunz8. "Know my friend just sent it to me freaking out", the user added in a separate tweet.
Chain-style hoax messages continue to plague other social networks, including WhatsApp and Facebook , and have popped up in emails.
But Snapchat has managed to evade the scams until now.
If you receive any odd screenshots in Snapchat, don't circulate them in order to prevent them from spreading further, and report the messages to Snapchat's official support account on Twitter (@SnapchatSupport).
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Hundreds of thousands of leaked Snapchat images are being dumped onto the internet right now.
And they aren't pictures of dogs or peoples' dinner, either. They're pictures of naked people.
The infamous and anarchic /b/ board on 4chan has christened the event "The Snappening" in a throwback to the recent leak of private celebrity nude photos that happened as a result of an iCloud breach.
You'll have to Google the name of that one for yourself.
Snapchat is a photo and video sharing application for iPhone and Android that allows users to send images to one another. What makes this application special is that the photos and videos are supposed to disappear forever after anywhere from 1 to 10 seconds.
You can imagine how these limited viewing capabilities may incentivize some people to take and share - shall we say - compromising photos of themselves.
Since the photos have a limited viewing time, there were a lot of third-party applications springing up that would allow you to capture that brief photo for future viewing or sharing.
These third-party apps were the source of the problem. At least that's what Snapchat is saying :
"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."
That application you installed to save your Snapchats may have been sending them to someone else.
The most prominent among them is called Snapsave, and they're denying any involvement, of course. We'll see where the ax falls on this one as the story develops.
The Snapchats were made available last night as a huge, 13GB library of image and video files. 4chan is currently doing what it does best and working hard to make that library into an organized database that can be searched by username.
Much of the Snapchat user demographic are minors. This means that the leak and any subsequent downloads of the file(s) could be prosecuted as dissemination and/or possession of child pornography.
Don't go looking for this stuff, folks.
The dominant, though unconfirmed, theory is that the photos were saved on a website called Snapsaved (distinct from Snapsave, mentioned above).
Snapsaved.com suddenly disappeared of the net a few months ago and now redirects to a digital hardware sales site in Denmark. Kind of sketchy. Their Facebook page is still up, but it hasn't been touched since March.
Of course, even if the files did come from Snapsaved, it doesn't mean it was a nefarious move on their part. Hackers could have broken into their servers, taken the pictures and videos, and leaked them onto 4chan without the company's knowledge.
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A Sunday event known as the "The Snappening" may have revealed compromising photos for an unknown number of Snapchat's users of a third-party website, according to The Guardian.
Lance Whitney is a freelance technology writer and trainer and a former IT professional. He's written for Time, CNET, PCMag, and several other publications. He's the author of two tech books--one on Windows and another on LinkedIn.
Hackers on Sunday posted photos and videos of Snapchat users, some of them underage, following through with a threat issued on Friday.
Roughly 13 gigabytes worth of pictures and videos from a site called Snapsaved.com were posted onto a 4chan discussion forum, according to UK publication The Guardian. How many of these photos might have been explicit and how many were of underage users is unclear. But the hackers who posted the images may have been the same ones responsible for posting nude photos of such celebrities as Jennifer Lawrence through the 4chan system this summer.
By default, Snapchat deletes your photos and videos after they are viewed by the receiving party. But in the past some users employed an app called SnapSave and a now-shuttered website named Snapsaved to let fellow Snapchatters read messages outside of the Snapchat app. That very action may have come back to haunt them.
In a statement released Saturday on Facebook, the people behind Snapsaved said the site had been hacked .
Warnings appeared on 4chan on Friday that the hacked photos would be leaked, The Guardian said. And on Sunday, around 13 gigabytes of the hacked Snapchat content were reportedly posted in an event called "The Snappening."
But there is a question over what the files actually revealed. People who downloaded the images said they contained a large amount of child pornography , according to The Telegraph. But one Reddit user cited by The Guardian said the "'The Snappening' did not live up to its billing." Most of the files were "low resolution garbage," claimed the user. However, he did say there were around 100 megabytes of nude photos and videos.
Snapchat has attempted to distance itself from any blame for the Snapsaved debacle. In a statement released late last week, Snapchat said: "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."
Snapsaved also explained the hack into its system and attempted to downplay the so-called "Snappening."
However, Snapsaved issued its statement on Saturday, while the Snappening itself occurred on Sunday.
A spokeswoman for Snapchat told CNET that the company does not share its user numbers externally.
"We also have no idea about how many users use third-party apps but we strongly recommend they don't and we work very hard to get them removed from the iTunes App Store and Google Play as they crop up," the spokeswoman added.

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