Hayley Williams Twitpic
May 29, 2010 by Jerry Reth · 1 Comment
Nude photos recently surfaced of Paramore’s Hayley Williams. She announced on her Twitter earlier in the day that someone had stolen an account of hers that contained a number of topless photos of the 21 year old singer. The pictures quickly spread around the Internet. The pictures were reportedly contained in her Twitpic account, which is a service that allows users to upload photos for quick URL shortening and easy sharing on Twitter. Some experts have stated that they believe that Williams herself may have accidentally posted the pictures, and then quickly removed them. However, she was not able to remove them before a number of individuals were able to save the pic and share them around the Internet.
Most experts have stated that the best way to keep your nude photos from being discovered is not to take them in the first place at all. If you do decide to take some, your best bet would be not to upload them online. A number of different stars have had their photos compromised in recent years, and have had their nude photos posted all over the Internet. The situation can be embarrassing and frightening for those involved.
The also say that you should use a password that is not easy to guess. Do not make it a word, a date, or a phrase. Instead, choose a password that contains capitals, letters, symbols, numbers and anything else that is allowed that will make the password harder to guess. Remember, most passwords are case sensitive, and you should also make sure that your password recovery question is not easy to guess either. Perhaps you should make the answer to the question unrelated to the question at all, and save the answer somewhere on a notepad.
EXIF data shows it was done on her Blackberry 9000 at 2010:05:27 19:40:11 if you examine the original photo that was posted on her Twitter further. If one saved it before she took it down, and examined it, all the proof is there. She is lying and she was not hacked, you can believe whatever you want though.
Keep in mind, this image was taken only *eight minutes* before it was published to her Twitter feed, and that makes it very, very, HIGHLY unlikely for someone to have hacked her in only *eight minutes*.
Hayley is lying.