Snapchat Nudity

Snapchat Nudity




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Snapchat Nudity

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Snapchat seems like the perfect safe-sexting app: It deletes the image just seconds after it's opened. Except for the very public, messy little trail it leaves.
The appeal of Snapchat — the entire point — is that it's private. Except that in one huge way, it's not.
Snapchat is a photo messaging service that’s had a recent explosion of popularity due its appeal to sexters. When you send a photo to a fellow snapper, the photo disappears on the other person’s phone after just a few seconds and doesn’t save on either of your phones. Here’s the best part: If the recipient takes a screenshot of the photo, the sender is notified. Sure, it can’t stop you from screenshotting, but the notification is a pretty good deterrent. The whole thing is perfect for worry-free sexting — use this app instead of text or e-mail, and your dirty business won’t leave behind a trace.
Except that Snapchat has a little known and incredibly stupid feature: Every user has a public Web profile that shows their top three most-messaged friends.
Here's my Snapchat web profile with my top three most snapped friends.
Imagine this scenario: Your very loving and sweet girlfriend looks at your Snapchat profile and sees that you’ve been messaging someone else more than her. Or that you’ve been messaging ANYONE other than her. You just blew it, buddy. Welcome to Dumpsville, population: you and your iPhone. With no saved message trail, you can’t even prove your innocence if you were really just sending pics of your cat. Now no one is ever going to love you, and you’re going to die alone with that cat (OK, maybe it’ll be a new cat by then, but there will definitely be a cat and it’s going to eat your corpse when no one finds your dead body for days).
For anyone looking at your Snapchat profile, it's pretty easy to find out the answer to the inevitable who the fuck is this bitch you’ve been Snapchatting?!? question. Since Snapchat presents itself as private — basically offline — many people use the same username as they use for other social media accounts. When I browsed through a few of my friends’ accounts, a quick Google search of their usernames pulled their Instagram and Twitter accounts right up.
It’s confusing as to why Snapchat would even have a Web presence for user profiles at all — it’s a service that’s made for phone-to-phone private communication. When you click on a friend’s name within the app, it takes you out of the app to their Web profile. Though the snapchat.com site doesn’t have a log-in, you can simply type in a username to see the Web profile: http://snapchat.com/username
This means people who aren't your friends on Snapchat can look up your profile. Does my boss/boyfriend/aunt/crush have a Snapchat account? Just try plugging in their Twitter or Instagram handle to the URL to see if an account pops up.
Your profile shows not only the number of snaps you send, but also your three “Best Friends,” which is determined automatically by whom you snap with most frequently. There’s also a points system, which isn’t based just on the number of snaps you sent; you give bonus points to people you snap three times in a row, and you get fewer points if you send snaps to multiple people. Basically, Snapchat is attempting what sounds like a bad joke about The Worst Idea in Tech: “Let’s gamify sexting.”
Honey, all those snaps I sent? I was just doing it for the points, I swear.
Katie Notopoulos is a senior technology reporter for BuzzFeed News and is based in New York. Contact this reporter at katie@buzzfeed.com.
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No, not " on fleek " as in they are cool or good, they are literally on Fleek — an app becoming popular on campuses as an unfiltered alternative to Snapchat. 
"It's like Snapchat, but with more boobs," one Georgetown University sophomore, who wished to remain anonymous, bluntly described the app to Tech Insider. The app started gaining popularity on the Georgetown campus at the end of fall semester in 2015.
Fleek, like Snapchat, lets users upload and share videos and photos that disappear after a set amount of time.
Users select their university and all posts are compiled into a giant story that can be viewed by anyone using the app. 
Anyone can submit anything — think nudity, kegs, and marijuana —and it'll go up on the app. Plus, there's also a peek feature that let's people who aren't on campus take a look. 
"I like that it's not curated," Georgetown sophomore (and former Tech Insider intern!) Will Haskell said. "A lot of Snapchat stories are so highly curated and when you live in a major city like we do, you have such a low likelihood of seeing your Snap make the cut. Fleek feels more real."
Of course, that's not necessarily a good thing for a college campus. 
"The stakes are definitely raised on Fleek because everything you send is going to go on the app," Haskell also explained. "People are definitely going to see it."
For the most part, the Georgetown students we talked to said the content on Fleek is harmless, if not a little NSFW. 
But, as you might have already guessed, not every student is prudent about what they post on the app. And like Snapchat, it's easy to screenshot a photo or video to save Fleek posts for later viewing or sharing. 
"One of my friends posted a video of me that was pretty violating," a female student, who also wished to remain anonymous, told TI about a video that was shared of her suggestively licking a lollipop. "Multiple people texted me about it after it happened."
Fleek isn't the only app on the market offering a potentially controversial look at college life. Yeti-Campus Stories offers a similar platform and faced criticism in 2015 , after a video of an alleged sexual assault was shared on the app. Fleek has already been met with resistance at schools like Florida Gulf Coast University . 
Still, at Georgetown, nothing serious has happened as a result of Fleek. At least, not yet. 
"It's only a matter of time," Haskell said. "It's really a problem waiting to happen."

Follow Tech Insider on Facebook and Twitter .


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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