1/30 dynasties = "mostly black"
1/30 dynasties = "mostly black"
How many "black" redheads are out there exactly?
So what you're saying is that it's a German film?
That sucks you were outraged that you had to read dirty words on the internet. Good luck in your quest to smear everyone who disagrees with you with that brush.
Gladly.
Copying something is not taking something. First hint: they're different words. Second hint: 'Copying something with you' and 'taking something with you' are two different things
The problem is that's assuming the person who hacked the accounts and the person who shared and uploaded the pictures are the same. According to the news reports, the people who started distributing and uploading the pics were part of a sharing ring and have no idea who actually obtained the pictures. You could catch…
Majority of people and media sources are using the appropriate term, which is "leaked", and that has you upset. Why would I be upset at the consensus of non-stupid people using "leaked"?
Read the first sentence and realize that copying something is not taking something. They're different verbs for a reason.
Wrong. Keep getting mad at correct terms being used.
Oh, cause they were hacked months if not years ago by a number of people, who no doubt went to great lengths to hide their trail. I mean, some hillbilly who chucks a body into a woodchipper in a remote location isn't as smart as an FBI agent either, but good luck getting a forensic lead on that.
Yeah, 'theft' is a defined term and not some sort of emotion you feel.
They waived their rights to privacy (the constitution doesn't mention 'Apple cloud services' btw) to the photos to the service providers. The service providers may bring charges against the hackers for illegal tampering of their property (having it…
cause people deliberately put their nudes where they can be easily stolen?
"Stolen" implies theft, when in reality they were copied. And it implies ownership, which the celebs forfeited when they accepted the ToS of the cloud service that states that images uploaded become the property of the service provider. "Leaked" is the correct term.
Well one is owned by an individual on a private residence and the other is owned by a corporation and is stored on a server farm. The former involves burglary against a person and the latter involves illegal tampering on a private corporation's server. Copying is not the same as theft, and the corporation owns the…
lol "privacy" on an internationally accessible medium
People still uploading their nudes to the internet and expecting it to work out okay?
So is Kotaku, as the mailing list proves.
Breitbart.com put out an article about GameJournoPros, a secret little mailing list with Kotaku staff colluding with other gamer sites to manufacture narratives and suppress speech of the userbase. Within a couple of hours this came out.
yeah, like those "skulls with brown hair" in the article