Part 3.1 of iCloud hacksCelebrities prepare to sue Google for $100 millionLetter to GoogleDMCA Take Down requests
Also Read Celebrity snaps of more than 100 celebrities leaked
Celebrities prepare to sue Google for $100 million
A report published by the business related website, Business Insider published a report today stating that the Hollywood celebrities are planning to sue the search engine Google for not removing the images as soon as they were reported to Google. A dozen of celebrities whose naked images were posted online have reportedly signed up famous Hollywood lawyer Marty Singer. Upon representing the celebrities, Singer has dashed of a letter to Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, as well as Chairman Eric Schmidt, threatening to sue them for $100 million if they don’t remove the naked photos of his clients that were posted online after the iCloud hack. Also Read Part 2 of the celeb iCloud hacks, Kim Kardashian, Vanessa Hudgens compromising pics leaked Readers may note that over hundred celebrities are likely to be affected by the now famous iClouds hacks. The hackers are who have reported amassed a huge cache of celebrity images, used a flaw in Apple’s password recovery system to gain access to iCloud backup files of the Hollywood stars. As of now upclose and personal images of Hollywood stars, Lawrence, Kate Upton, Kim Kardashian, Cara Delevingne, Vanessa Hudgens, Kirsten Dunst, Ariana, Kim Kardashian, Vanessa Hudgen, Avril Lavigne, Aubrey Plaza, Hayden Panettiere, Mary-Kate Olsen, Lake Bell, Avril Lavigne, Kaley Cuoco, Leelee Sobieski, Cara Delevingne, Anna Kendrick, Misty May-Treanor, Alexandra Chando,Kelli Garner, Brook Burns, Lauren O’Neil and now Amber Heard, Lake Bell, Lizzy Caplan and Gabrielle Union have been leaked by the iClouds hacks hacker. It is not known which of these celebrities Marty Singer is representing.
Letter to Google
In his letter to Google, Singer has accuses the Search giant of “making millions from the victimization of women” and engaging in “blatantly unethical behavior.” According to Singer, takedown requests were sent to Google days after the celebrity photos leaked online. Apparently the images have not been removed from YouTube and Blogger, and Singer has accused Google of failing “to act expeditiously, and responsibly to remove the images.” Also Read Part 3 of the celeb iCloud hacks, Cara Delevingne, Anna Kendrick, Jennifer Lawrence pics leaked Page Six a Hollywood news website says that it has seen the letter. Singer has also written that his firm, Lavely & Singer sent a notice to remove images four weeks ago, and a dozen more since, but many of the images are still on Google sites BlogSpot and YouTube. The letter states, Singer’s letter goes on to compare Google’s failure to remove the images of Hollywood celebrities as shameful as the recent Ray Rice assault scandal.
DMCA Take Down requests
Many others have joined the bandwagon to criticize Google. Kate Upton’s boyfriend, baseball player Jason Verlander, sent DMCA takedown requests to Google asking the company to delist sites that host the naked photos. Torrent Freak has also reported that Google reportedly rejected nearly half of the iCloud Hacks takedown requests. However it is very cruel to blame Google for the Hollywood star’s own foolishness. Apple’s Tim Cook has already clarified that said that celebs iCloud accounts were compromised due to their own mistakes. He said the Hollywood celebrities were either victims of phishing scams or had had their passwords stolen because hackers had guessed their security questions correctly Apple had earlier this month confirmed there had been a “targeted attack” on “certain celebrities,” rather than a widespread security breach affecting all users. To be fair to Google, its staff don’t choose what the search engine turns up on the net. The system is an algorithm that simply detects what other people have published and puts up the results.