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  • [MUSIC]

  • >> T: And I’m Trisha Hershberger.

  • >> M: If you used twitter at all this weekend, youre probably aware that a massive cache

  • of nudes photos and videos, many of them belonging to celebrities and public figures, was leaked

  • by hackers from across the darkest, seediest parts of the web.

  • >> T: What many are unaware of is that the collection is actually several smaller collections

  • that have been traded in a small circle of underground hackers for quite some time, and

  • the cache is likely years in the making. Several of the photos are reportedly years old, and

  • have long since been deleted from the celebritiespersonal devices.

  • >> M: However, members of this ring found and exposed a serious flaw in the security

  • system of Apple’s iCloud, which allowed them to repeatedly guess passwords without

  • being shut out. Other methods included something calledsocial engineering”, namely, researching

  • and then correctly answering security questions.

  • >> T: Now, I’m sure that many of you want to know who got hacked, and what you can and

  • can’t see, and where you can find the incriminating evidence of their sex lives, but were not

  • going to share that with you. Why?

  • >> M & T: Because it’s none of our business.

  • >> M: It’s not yours, it’s not ours, it’s nobody’s. This is a serious and sick invasion

  • of real peoplesprivacy. People stole private, personal property of OTHER PEOPLE. Just because

  • someone is a public figure does not mean that we have any right to see what they look like

  • naked, unless they choose to share that with the world. And yeah, that is a choice. It

  • doesn’t make someone a slut, or a whore, or someone to be degraded. Period.

  • >> T: Many people are saying that if these women didn’t want to have their nude photos

  • hacked and leaked, then they should never have taken them. That they should know better

  • than to leave evidence of their healthy sex lives if they don’t want it shared with

  • the world. It’s a flawed argument, and it’s one that is more about shaming the victim

  • than solving the problem.

  • >> M: Youre right. When we rely on modern technology to hold onto anything of value,

  • there’s a chance that someone with an agenda and way too much time on their hands will

  • steal it. But let’s just say, for example, I have an award-winning pizza recipe, and

  • I save it to my phone. If someone hacked me and stole my pizza recipe, would you blame

  • me for having a pizza recipe, or some weirdo who STOLE my pizza recipe?

  • >> T: What a food whore. You know he wants to eat that pizza.

  • >> M: Yeah, what a hot piece of pizza. Fuck him for trying to keep that to himself.

  • >> T: I bet he makes all the pizza. He’d look so good making my pizza.

  • >> M: Every person on the planet has the right to take nude photos of themselves. Every single

  • person. They also have the right to share it or not share it with the world. These hackers

  • STOLE these women’s property and took that choice away from them. It’s a cycle of sexualized

  • emotional violence that’s got to stop. Theyre people. Don’t click the link.

  • >> T: Everyone on the planet has a choice: Click, or don’t click. You can either be

  • part of the problem or part of the solution. And if you do want to take pictures of yourself

  • in the buff, know

  • your tech.

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[MUSIC]

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