![]() ![]() But the chance your phone will be damaged beyond repair, lost, or stolen is pretty good. While there's no doubt that the group responsible for revealing more of Selena Gomez than she hoped was determined, the odds anyone is interested in you aren't particularly great. You need to consider the chance that someone is going to hack your cloud account against the chance you're going to lose your phone. Instead, take some simple steps to get safer and smarter. And everyone else who tells you it's better not to use cloud backup. But the normally sober Will Oremus at Slate: "How to Not Back Up Your Naked Selfies to the Cloud" seems to have gotten caught in the frenzy too. The Mirror, in typical tabloid fashion: "Celebrity nude photo hacking: How to disable iPhone iCloud backups and keep your pictures safe" you'd expect. Because photos are backed up to iCloud automatically from iPhones - and to Google+ on Android - there has been a spate of articles explaining how you can shut off this functionality to "protect" yourself from being similarly victimized. The release of numerous nude photos of celebrities over the past several days was apparently made possible by a group of determined hackers who broke into the iCloud accounts of Jennifer Lawrence, Kate Upton and others. ![]()
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