

MacDailyNews Note: Once again: Too many people use one password for multiple services and weak passwords at that. Even people who I know and love say, ‘Oh, yeah, I looked at the pictures.’ I don’t want to get mad, but at the same time I’m thinking, I didn’t tell you that you could look at my naked body.'” ‘Anybody who looked at those pictures, you’re perpetuating a sexual offense. Vanity Fair reports, “In the cover story, the Hunger Games star vents her frustration not just with the offending hackers but also with those-including people she knows-who viewed the images online. I can’t imagine being that thoughtless and careless and so empty inside.'” I just can’t imagine being that detached from humanity. Just the fact that somebody can be sexually exploited and violated, and the first thought that crosses somebody’s mind is to make a profit from it. That’s why these Web sites are responsible. The law needs to be changed, and we need to change. “Lawrence continued, ‘It is a sexual violation. It is a sex crime,'” Vanity Fair reports. Styled by Jessica Diehl.“Lawrence also addresses the legal ramifications of the hack. It was long distance, and either your boyfriend is going to look at porn or he’s going to look at you.'” I was in a loving, healthy, great relationship for four years. I started to write an apology, but I don’t have anything to say I’m sorry for. “She had been tempted to write a statement when news of the privacy violation broke, she says, but ‘every single thing that I tried to write made me cry or get angry. I can’t believe that we even live in that kind of world,'” Vanity Fair reports. It’s my body, and it should be my choice, and the fact that it is not my choice is absolutely disgusting. ‘It does not mean that it comes with the territory. “‘Just because I’m a public figure, just because I’m an actress, does not mean that I asked for this,’ she says. I didn’t know how this would affect my career.’That’s just the beginning of what Jennifer Lawrence has to say about her stolen-photos saga in the cover story of Vanity Fair’s November issue, the digital edition of which will be available Wednesday, October 8, and which hits newsstands in New York and Los Angeles on Thursday, October 9,” Vanity Fair reports.
