Sexting & Sextortion Scams (5 Viewers)

I will be happy to fax Xerox copies of Polaroids of my junk to any interested parties…. Now let me go prepare for the massive influx of requests to my SR private conversation inbox .
A fax?

I want zoomed in 4k digital!
 
Penalties for this need to be severe, and social media companies need to be doing more to prevent it and doing more when it's reported
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N., a 21-year-old with autism and bipolar disorder, was struggling to adjust after he moved with his parents from Colorado to Idaho in 2020. Feeling lonely, N. turned to Facebook, which he had joined to keep up with his old friends. He was surprised when he started receiving messages from what appeared to be a young woman through the app, according to his mother in interviews. The person was kind to him. He embraced the new online friendship that was developing.

After several days of chatting, the person sent N. an enticing nude photo and asked for him to send one of himself in return. N. had just finished work and was sitting in his car in the parking lot when he responded by sending a photo of his genitalia. The picture also included his face and his work uniform that identified the name of his employer.

The betrayal from his supposed new friend was swift and vicious. The person demanded $500 or else the photo would be sent to his entire contact list on Facebook, including family, friends and work colleagues. N. would be humiliated, perhaps lose his job and maybe even be prosecuted. He tried to negotiate. He had only $200 to offer, but he struggled setting up the payment app that the scammer required.

When N. took too long to send the money, the scammer blasted the photo to 15 of his family members, his mother said. They included N. in the message so he would know what happened.

In his car, N. called his mother. “He was hysterical,” she recalled. “You could tell in his voice that something horrible had happened. It was something he felt he couldn’t live through. He was frantic.”

N. told her she wouldn’t see him again. “I’m just calling to tell you goodbye,” he told her. Rae didn’t know anything about the Facebook photo, but she knew her son was in trouble.

While he was still on the line, N. found a knife in his car and began cutting into his wrists. She begged him to wait for her, to hold on, that everything would be okay.

She was 10 minutes away and drove toward the store as fast as possible. Along the way, she called her husband, who was still working inside the store. He ran toward his son’s car and found him covered in blood. His father grabbed the knife and comforted his son. Rae arrived a few minutes later.

N. survived, but the ramifications of his victimization remain.

The family went to the police, but were told that nothing could be done. For victims like N., a legal adult, there was little recourse, even with his disability..........

 
Don't send compromising pictures to anyone you haven't met in person. Make sure you trust that person. Even then, once sent, there is no ability to recall that picture.
We’ve been preaching this to our kids for the last 7-10 years. Once it’s out there, it’s out there, and trust is a fickle thing. You might think you have this great relationship with someone and choose to send them a compromising photo, but if you all fall out, what’s to stop them from spreading your business around? It’s not worth it.
 
We’ve been preaching this to our kids for the last 7-10 years. Once it’s out there, it’s out there, and trust is a fickle thing. You might think you have this great relationship with someone and choose to send them a compromising photo, but if you all fall out, what’s to stop them from spreading your business around? It’s not worth it.
But if you’re hung like a horse dare them to send it to everyone they possibly can
 
But if you’re hung like a horse dare them to send it to everyone they possible.
You know, I didn’t recall ever seeing a horse’s pecker, and the phrase “hung like a horse” is frequently used, so I did a quick Google search to see what all the fuss is about. I’ve made a couple of determinations based on my findings:

- That is not a pecker; rather, a weapon of mass destruction.
- I don’t have one of those.
 
You know, I didn’t recall ever seeing a horse’s pecker, and the phrase “hung like a horse” is frequently used, so I did a quick Google search to see what all the fuss is about. I’ve made a couple of determinations based on my findings:

- That is not a pecker; rather, a weapon of mass destruction.
- I don’t have one of those.
Hope you deleted your browser and search history

“why was he looking up horse dicks?”
 
You know, I didn’t recall ever seeing a horse’s pecker, and the phrase “hung like a horse” is frequently used, so I did a quick Google search to see what all the fuss is about. I’ve made a couple of determinations based on my findings:

- That is not a pecker; rather, a weapon of mass destruction.
- I don’t have one of those.
Now go look up horse fluffer.
 
You know, I didn’t recall ever seeing a horse’s pecker, and the phrase “hung like a horse” is frequently used, so I did a quick Google search to see what all the fuss is about. I’ve made a couple of determinations based on my findings:

- That is not a pecker; rather, a weapon of mass destruction.
- I don’t have one of those.
but if you do the math with the weight and size of a horse compared to the size of its thing, being hung like a horse just means you are below average. A horse weighs average 1000 lbs with a 20" thing. Average man is 200 Lbs. He needs only a 4" thing to be hung like a horse.
Hey, i don't make the rules...
 

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