In Vanity Fair, Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Lawrence said she was offended and feared the photos would affect her career. “Just because I’m a public figure, because I’m an actor, doesn’t mean I have to put up with this insult,” she said.
She angrily stated, “It’s not a scandal. It’s a sex crime, it’s an insult. It’s disgusting. The law needs to change and we need to change. It is. Which explains why websites that distribute these private photos should be held accountable.”
Jennifer Lawrence also explained to Vanity Fair magazine that these hot pictures she took to send to her ex-boyfriend while the two were in a close relationship.
“I started writing an apology, but I didn’t do anything to apologize,” Jennifer Lawrence explains.
Hundreds of sensitive photos of a series of stars, including Jennifer Lawrence, were released online because hackers hacked into the stars’ iCloud accounts in early September.
Attorney Marty Singer, representing dozens of star victims in this incident, wrote a letter to the media, claiming to ask Google to pay $ 100 million for still allowing these hot images to appear. in search results.